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Experts Reveal How to Build World's
Top Railway
Chinese experts have revealed key solutions to build world's top
railway on western China's Qinghai- Tibet Plateau this week, in
response to the world concerns for China's ability to complete such
a grand project.
"Although we will meet world-level difficulties, we believe
all barriers will be finally eliminated, based on our long-term
feasibility study since the 1950s and similar foreign experience,"
said experts and officials involved in the project.
The Qinghai-Tibet Railway runs from Xining, capital of Qinghai
Province, to Lhasa, capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region. The
first 845-km section from Xining to Gormo, also in Qinghai, was
completed and opened to traffic in 1979. Construction of the last
1,118-km section from Gormo to Lhasa is scheduled to start this
year.
Xu Yong, an official with the Ministry of Railways (MOR), said,
"the first handicap will be the permanent frozen earth. About
550 km of the railway will pass through such areas."
According to Xu, the frozen earth there is sensitive to air temperature
changes, as a result of strong sunshine and frequent earth crust
movements on the plateau. Therefore, any human activities, including
railway building, will have a drastic influence on the earth.
"Fortunately, we have so far found the proper way of building
railways on such special ground," disclosed Wu Ziwang, a noted
expert on frozen earth projects.
Ran Li, chief engineer with the No.1 Survey and Design Institute
under the MOR, agreed that they have conducted experiments in areas
with an elevation of 4,750 meters, building roadbed, bridges, houses,
water supply and drainage systems in frozen earth areas. Based on
their experiments, they have worked out ways to protect frozen earth
during the process of the project.
The measures to be adopted include appropriate height of roadbed,
heat-insulating layers, and more elevated sections.
The second problem is that the power of a locomotive decreases
as the height goes up.
According to Wu Xinmin, a locomotive expert with the MOR, ordinary
locomotives can only exert 60 percent of its full power at a height
of 4,000 meters or higher, while more than 960 kilometers, or over
four-fifths of the railway section will be built at an altitude
of over 4,000 meters, with the highest point hitting 5,072 meters.
"It must be a severe challenge for China's railway industry,"
said Wu.
He disclosed that diesel locomotives will be used on the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway, and experts also consider electrification of the railway
in the future, as well as taking advantage of local rich sunlight
and wind energy as a supplement.
How to resolve the problem of oxygen shortage and low air pressure
on the high-altitude and extreme-cold area and provide a comfortable
condition for passengers is another problem.
Chinese experts have also found some solutions. Wu said they are
now thinking of using airtight cars similar to airliners. Some other
experts predicted that the world's first train with equipment to
provide oxygen and plateau-illness doctors will appear on the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway.
As to the ecological environment protection, Ran said construction
of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway will not bring "ecological disasters"
to the project area, contrarily, it will play a key role in protecting
the local ecological environment.
The construction will be well organized to protect vegetation on
the plateau, with the top soil to be moved aside and then mostly
restored after the roadbed is built.
To protect animal and plant resources in the Hoh Xil, Qiangtang
and other nature reserves in the area, more bridges and passages
for animals will be built on the section of the Qinghai-Tibet railway
in the nature reserve zones, Ran said.
More measures will be taken to keep a clean environment along the
railroad, such as closed passenger trains will be arranged on the
rail line, and the garbage on the trains will be treated in designated
places.
Ran said that people who live in the area along the railway mainly
burn firewood and animal manure to cook meals and for other daily
life purposes, which is detrimental to local fragile ecological
environment.
The Qinghai-Tibet railway, upon completion, will play a very important
role in protecting the environment on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau,
as it serves as a major passage through which coal, petroleum and
other energy resources can be transported into Tibet from northwest
China, Ran added.
Date:Thursday, March 22
People's Daily
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