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QINGZANG RAILWAY

(Redirected from Qinghai–Tibet Highway)
Map of the railway

The 'Qingzang railway', 'Qinghai–Xizang railway', or 'Qinghai–Tibet railway' (), is a high-altitude railway that connects Xining, Qinghai Province, to Lhasa, Tibet Autonomous Region, in China.
The section of the railway between Golmud and Lhasa was inaugurated on 1 July 2006 by president Hu Jintao: the first two passenger trains were "Qing 1" (Q1) from Golmud to Lhasa, and "Zang 2" (J2) from Lhasa.[1] This railway is the first to connect China proper with the Tibet Autonomous Region, which due to its altitude and terrain is the last province-level entity in the People's Republic of China to have a conventional railway. Testing of the line and equipment started on May 1 2006.[2] Trains run from Beijing, Chengdu, Chongqing, Xining and Lanzhou.[3]
The line includes the Tanggula Pass, at 5,072 m above sea level the world's highest rail track.
The 1,338 m Fenghuoshan tunnel is the highest rail tunnel in the world, at 4,905 m above sea level. The 3,345-m Yangbajing tunnel is the longest tunnel on the line. It is 4,264 m above sea level, 80 kilometres north-west of Lhasa.
More than 960 km, or over 80% of the railway, is at an altitude of more than 4,000 m. There are 675 bridges, totalling 159.88 km, and over half the length of the railway is laid on permafrost.

Contents
Stations
Trains and tickets
Oxygen supply
Construction
Engineering challenges
Economic impact
Environmental impact
Criticism
Fleet
Media
See also
References
External links

Stations


Main articles: List of stations on Qingzang railway

In the Golmud to Lhasa part of the line, 45 stations are open, 38 of which are unstaffed, monitored in the control center in Xining. Thirteen more stations are planned. [4]

Trains and tickets


The ticket, no differences from other railway tickets used in China.

Passenger Health Registration Card

The trains are specially built for high altitude environment. The diesel locomotives used on Golmud-Lhasa section were made by GE in Pennsylvania, and the passenger carriages are Chinese-made 25T carriages: on train T27/T28, between Beijing West and Lhasa, BSP carriages are from Bombardier. Carriages used on the Golmud-Lhasa section are either deep green/yellow or deep red/yellow. Signs in the carriages are in Tibetan, Simplified Chinese and English. The operational speed is 120 km/h, 100 km/h in sections laid on permafrost.
The 1,142-km Qinghai–Tibet railway from Golmud to Lhasa was completed on October 12 2005. It opened to regular trial service on July 1, 2006.[5] During the one-year trial period, three passenger trains ran from Beijing, Chengdu/Chongqing, and Xining/Lanzhou, numbered T27/T28, T22/T23/T24/T21, T222/T223/T224/T221, N917/N918, K917/K918, respectively. Train T27 from Beijing to Lhasa takes 47 hours 28 minutes, covering 4,064 km (2,500 miles), departs at 21:30 from Beijing West, and arrives in Lhasa at 20:58 on the third day. A ticket costs CNYÂ¥ 389 for hard seat, CNYÂ¥ 813 for a lower hard sleeper (a lower bunk in a basic sleeping car), or CNYÂ¥ 1,262 for a lower soft sleeper (a bunk in a more luxurious sleeping car). T28 from Lhasa to Beijing West departs at 08:00 and arrives in Beijing at 08:00 on the third day, takes 48 hours.
Apart from hard seat tickets, there is an extra charge for forward-facing seats/berths. Compared with standard pricing for the same class, the soft seat, hard sleeper and soft sleeper tickets have an added charge of 0.09, 0.10 or 0.16 yuan per kilometre per person respectively.
Trains from Shanghai and Guangzhou started on October 1 2006. Train T264/5 from Guangzhou departs at 10:29 every other day and arrives in Lhasa at 19:50 on the third day (duration: 57 hours 21 minutes), while T266/3 (from 4 October 2006) departs Lhasa at 08:32 and arrive in Guangzhou at 19:37 on the third day (duration: 59 hours 5 minutes). Trains T164/5 from Shanghai to Lhasa depart at 16:11 from Shanghai, via Wuxi, Nanjing, Bengbu, Zhengzhou, Xi'an, Lanzhou, Xining, Golmud, Nagqu, arrive in Lhasa at 19:50 on the third day (duration: 51 hours 39 minutes). Trains T166/3 from Lhasa to Shanghai depart at 08:32 and arrive in Shanghai at 13:45 on the third day (duration: 53 hours 13 minutes). Therefore, the Beijing and Lhasa journey is the shortest in terms of time duration.
A ''Passenger Health Registration Card'' is required to take the train. The card can be obtained when purchasing the ticket. Passengers must read the health notice for high-altitude travel and sign the agreement on the card to take the train. On August 28 2006 a 75-year-old Hong Kong man was reported to be the first passenger to die on the train, after he had suffered heart problems in Lhasa but insisted on travelling to Xining. [2] On November 19 2006 a woman died giving birth to a child on her own in a toilet.
Ticket prices for five-carriage trains in the testing period were as follows: (Unit: Chinese Yuan)
TrainFrom/ToKilometresHard SeatHard Sleeper (lower berth)Soft Sleeper (lower berth)
T27/28Beijing west - Lhasa40643898131262
T22/23/24/21Chengdu - Lhasa33603317121104
T222/223/224/221Chongqing - Lhasa36543557541168
T164/5 Shanghai - Lhasa43734068451314
T166/3 Lhasa - Shanghai43734068451314
T262Guangzhou - Lhasa49804519231434
T264Lhasa - Guangzhou49804519231434
K917/K918Lanzhou - Lhasa2188242552854
N917/N918Xining - Lhasa1972226523810


Oxygen supply


From October 2006 five pairs of passenger trains run between Golmud and Lhasa, and one more pair between Xining and Golmud. The line has a capacity of eight pairs of passenger trains, and the carriages are specially built and have an oxygen supply for each passenger.

Construction


Liuwu tunnel (柳梧隧é“), the last tunnel before Lhasa station.

Since the formation of the Tibetan Autonomous Region in early 1950s, the Chinese government has dreamed of building a railway connecting Tibet to the rest of China. Engineers were sent to investigate the possibility, but shortage of technology and money prevented the project from starting.
The 815 km section from Xining, Qinghai to Golmud, Qinghai opened to traffic in 1984. Construction of the remaining 1,142 km section from Golmud to Lhasa could not be started until the recent economic growth of China. This section was formally started on 29 June 2001. This section was finished on October 12, 2005, and signalling work and track testing took another eight months. It was completed in five years at a cost of $3.68 billion.
Track-laying in Tibet was launched from both directions, towards Tanggula Mountain and Lhasa, from Anduo Railway Station on 22 June 2004. On 24 August 2005, track was laid at the railway's highest point, the Tanggula Pass, 5,072 m (16,640 feet) above sea level.[6]
Forty-four railway stations are to be built, among them Tanggula Mountain railway station, at 5,068 m the world's highest (Cóndor station, at 4,786 m, on the Rio Mulatos-Potosí line, Bolivia, and La Galera station at 4,781 m in Peru, being the next highest) The Qingzang Railway project involved more than 20,000 workers and over 6,000 pieces of industrial equipment, and is considered one of China's major accomplishments of the 21st century.
Bombardier Transportation provided 361 high-altitude passenger carriages with special enriched-oxygen and UV-protection systems, delivered between December 2005 and May 2006. Fifty-three are luxury sleeper carriages for tourist services.[7]
The construction of the railway was part of the China Western Development strategy, an attempt to develop the western provinces of China, which are much less developed than eastern China. The railway will be extended to Zhangmu via Shigatse (日喀则) to the west, and Dali via Nyingchi (æž—èŠ) to the east. A further extension is planned to link Shigatse with Yadong near the China-India border [8] (Map [9]). The railway is considered one of the greatest feats achieved in modern Chinese history by the government, and as a result is often mentioned on regular TV programs. Chinese-Tibetan folk singer Han Hong has a song called ''Tianlu'' (Road to Heaven; 天路) praising and glorifying the Qingzang Railway.
The bridge on permafrost horizon

Engineering challenges


There were and are many technical difficulties for such a railway.
About half of the second section was built on ''barely permanent permafrost''. In the summer, the uppermost layer thaws, and the ground becomes muddy. Chinese engineers dealt with this problem by building elevated tracks with foundations sunk deep into the ground, inserting vertical pipes that circulate liquid nitrogen and cold nitrogen gas into the ground, building hollow concrete pipes beneath the tracks to keep the rail bed frozen, and using metal sun shades.[10]
Kunlun Pass

The air in Tibet is much thinner, having 35% to 40% less oxygen than at sea level. Special passenger carriages are used, and several oxygen factories were built along the railway. At this altitude in these latitudes, water in toilets must be heated to prevent freezing. The Chinese government claimed that no construction worker died during the construction due to altitude sickness related diseases. [11] The railway passes the Kunlun Mountains, an earthquake zone. A magnitude 8.1 earthquake struck in 2001. Dozens of earthquake monitors have been installed along the railway.

Economic impact


With limited industrial capacity in Tibet, the Tibetan economy heavily relies on industrial products from more developed parts of China. Transport of goods in and out of Tibet was mostly through the Qingzang Highway connecting Tibet to the adjacent Qinghai province, which was built in the early 1950s. The length and terrain have limited the capacity of the highway, with less than 1 million tons of goods transported each year. With the construction of the Qingzang railway, the cost of transportion of both passengers and goods should be greatly reduced, allowing for an increase in volume—the cost per tonne-kilometer will be reduced from 0.38 RMB to 0.12 RMB. It is projected that by 2010 2.8 million tons will be carried to and from Tibet, with over 75% carried by the railway[12]. This is expected to boost and transform the Tibetan economy.

Environmental impact


The environmental impact of the new railway is an ongoing concern. The increase in passenger traffic will result in greater tourism and economic activity on the Tibetan Plateau.
Wood is the main fuel source for rural inhabitants in certain regions of Tibet. The damage to the ecosystem caused by cutting trees for fuel takes years to recover due to slow growth caused by Tibet's harsh environment condition. The railway would make coal, which is not produced in Tibet, an affordable replacement. However, the increase in fuel combustion due to increased human activity in an already-thin atmosphere may affect the long term health of the local population.
Some people worried that railway passengers will throw trash out of train windows. This is unlikely, as all passenger cars will be sealed to enable oxygen enhancement once a train enters Tibet. Trash will be carried back to Golmud by trains to be processed.
The effects of this railway on wild animals such as Tibetan antelope and plants are currently unknown. Thirty-three overpasses were constructed specifically to allow continued animal migration, here is the Google Maps satellite image of one of such bridges.

Criticism


Opposition of Qingzang railway in a Tibetan refugee colony in India.

Opponents of China's Tibet policies claimed that the railway was built to strengthen its political control over Tibet. [13]
The railway will encourage further immigration from the rest of China, reducing the proportion of Tibetans in the Tibet Autonomous Region. Tibetans find it increasingly difficult to compete in the job market against skilled Han workers (most of the workers on the railway were of the Han ethnicity).[14] Tibetans and activist groups have also expressed concerns that the Chinese government will use the railway to strengthen its military presence in the Tibet Autonomous Region as well as to further exploit Tibet's natural resources and damage its environment. As a result, Bombardier Transportation, a Canadian company, has faced international criticism from some pro-independence organizations for its involvement in constructing rail cars for the project.[15][16][17]
Promotional poster for the new railway at Nagchu

Fleet



★ 361 Bombardier Sifang Power (Qingdao) Transportation Ltd./Power Corporation of Canada/China South Locomotive and Rolling Stock Industry (Group) Corporation High-Grade Coach - 308 standard cars and 53 special tourist cars

GE Transportation NJ2 locomotive (78 GE designation C38AChe locomotives were built)

★ Qishuyang Locomotive Factory DF8CJ 9000 series locomotive - similar to the Bombardier Transportation-GE Transportation Blue Tiger diesel electric locomotive

Media



See also



List of railways in China

References




★ M.W.H., Railroad in the clouds, ''Trains'' March 2002
1. [1] Report of inauguration, accessed July 1, 2006
2. Tibet's 1st railway to start unmanned operation
3. China Tibet Information Center. Shanghai strives for straight train to Lhasa. Retrieved April 7, 2006.
4. http://news.sina.com.cn/c/2006-07-01/193210306837.shtml
5. China rolls out railway, BBC News. Retrieved June 30, 2006.
6. Xinhua News Agency (August 24, 2005). New height of world's railway born in Tibet. Retrieved August 25, 2005.
7. Bombardier (February 25, 2005). Bombardier Awarded A Contract For High Altitude Passenger Rail Cars In Tibet. Retrieved August 25 2005.
8. Extension plans. Retrieved June 28, 2006
9. http://sun-bin.blogspot.com/2006/07/qinghai-tibet-railway-videos.html
10. Wired Magazine Issue 14.07. [3]
11. News on Chinese government website (in Chinese) quotes: The vice president of Qinghai Medical University, Dr Gerili, said "Because of proper preventions and treatments, among tens of thousands of workers from low altitude, no one died due to altitude sickness. You cannot deny that it's a miracle."
12. News - Qingzang railway transported .73M passengers, boosts Tibet economy, in chinese
13. http://www.savetibet.org/news/newsitem.php?id=497
14. http://www.chinapost.com.tw/asiapacific/detail.asp?ID=84633&GRP=C
15. http://www.bombardieroutoftibet.org
16. http://actionnetwork.org/sft/alert-description.tcl?alert_id=3492803
17. http://www.tibet.ca/en/wtnarchive/2005/6/18_3.html


External links



Railway map of China

Environmental Protection Along the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, US Embassy report

★ ''The Guardian'', 20 September 2005, "The railway across the roof of the world"

Wired Magazine, July 2006, "Train to the Roof of the World"

Tibet railway construction

Tibet railway videos

Actual Images published in the Wired Magazine

CCTV report regarding the railroad

★ A train travelling near the Tsonag Lake, Cuonahu railway station. [4] [5] [6]

"The train to Tibet", The New Yorker, 16 April 2007

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