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China Is Technically,
Financially Able to Build Qinghai-Tibet Railway: Official
A senior official with the Ministry of Railways has said that China
is technically and financially capable of constructing the proposed
Qinghai-Tibet Railway, and he pledged to curb corruption and shoddy
construction with regard to the project by every means.
Vice-Minister Sun Yongfu talked about the railway project in an
interview with Xinhua as he is attending the National People's Congress
(NPC) as a deputy.
The railway is of strategic significance and will exert a far-
reaching impact in political, economic and military terms, the official
said.
All spending for the world's highest railway project will be borne
by the central government and, in addition, there will be open tenders
and bids for the project among domestic companies, according to
the official.
Advanced foreign technology, especially expertise on frozen- soil
engineering, will be introduced in both periods of feasibility study
and construction of the project, Sun said.
The railway, 1,100 km in length, will be completed within six years
to link up Golmud, a traffic hub in Qinghai Province, with Lhasa,
the regional capital of Tibet, and afterwards, it will be extended
to Shigaze and Linzhi of Tibet, as well as Yunnan Province.
On the issue of possible environmental consequences of the plateau
railway, the vice-minister revealed that his ministry is working
with other departments concerned to study ways to minimize the negative
effects of the project.
As the railway will pass through a region which is home to the
sources of the country's largest rivers, including Yangtze and Yellow
rivers, due measures will be taken to prevent vegetation from being
damaged by the project, he said.
According to some experts, turfs could be removed before taking
earth to build the railway, and afterwards, returned to their original
place. Or the turfs could be re-generated through planting grass
seeds.
As the railway is expected to go by the Hoh Xil National Nature
Reserve, culverts are expected to be built under the tracks to let
wild animals pass.
"We'll try our best to protect natural resources, despite
the fact that it may slow down construction," Sun said.
The official went on to note that the project will encounter three
major problems -- geological impact, frozen soil, and the sheer
coldness and oxygen shortage on the high land. China is confident
and capable of getting over all these obstacles, he stressed.
Currently, experts from the Ministry of Land and Resources, the
State Seismological Administration, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences
are studying geological problems in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau which
is plagued with landslides, mudflows, karst rocks, earthquakes,
and thunderstorms, according to the official.
On the issue of frozen earth, which is seen as a major headache
for building plateau railways, glacier experts have been sent to
the area to conduct on-the-spot investigations, while foreign railways
built on frozen soil in Russia and Canada are also being studied,
the official said. Magnetic materials and new technology might be
used in the project, he added.
Experts from the Ministry of Railways and those from the Army and
the Ministry of Health are working together on experiments, in order
to find ways to deal with the lack of oxygen that may pose a threat
to construction workers, Sun noted.
China is technically and financially capable of building it into
a first-class railway and it is the right time for its launching,
he said.
The government will be trying hard to keep the project away from
corruption, by inviting open tenders from domestic contractors via
the Internet and newspapers, the official pledged. Furthermore,
the project will adopt the ownership responsibility system and the
engineering supervision system, so as to curb corruption and prevent
shoddy construction, he said.
Date:Wednesday, March 07, 2001
Peopledaily
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