There was no highway in Tibet before its peaceful liberation.
Economic and social contacts in Tibet and its contacts with
the outside world depended solely on human power and draft
animals, as well as post roads. Now, a transportation network
consisting of 24,000 km of highways, a dozen air routes
and more than 1,000 km of pipelines has been completed.
Still, Tibet remains the only autonomous region (province)
in China inaccessible by rail. Transportation has long been
a bottleneck holding back the economic and social development
of Tibet and hindering the improvement of the people's living
standards. Building the Qinghai-Tibet Railway has been the
long-cherished wish of people of all ethnic groups in Tibet.
It is not only essential for strengthening links between
Tibet and the hinterland, accelerating the economic and
social development of Tibet and improving the local people's
material and cultural well-being, but is also of great significance
for enhancing ethnic unity and common prosperity.
On June 29, 2001, with the approval of the Central Government,
construction of the section between Golmud and Lhasa began
as part of the second phase of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
project. This railway line will be 1,142 km long, and will
involve an investment of 26.21 billion yuan. It will take
six years to complete. Making the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
an ecology-friendly railway line was the goal set at the
time the project was appraised.
During the initial research period, an appraisal of the
impact of the railway line on the environment was carefully
conducted. In the initial period of the project, relevant
departments chose several aspects that would affect the
ecological environment, and conducted intensive research.
On the basis of this research and with arrangement by the
Chinese government, specialists from various fields carried
out in-depth on-the-spot investigations, and conducted a
sound scientific appraisal of the impact of the railway
building on Tibet's ecology and environment in light of
the requirements of the environmental protection, water
and soil conservation, and wild animals protection laws,
and those of the "National Plan for Eco-environmental
Improvement," and the "National Program for Eco-environmental
Protection." They compiled a report and some other
documents, offering their appraisals of the environmental
impacts, together with proposals for protection of the ecological
environment. In light of the requirements of the appraisal,
a guideline for the construction of the project was worked
out, i.e., "giving priority to prevention and protection
and attaching equal importance to both development and protection."
The result of the appraisal of the ecological environment
was used to guide the designing and construction of the
railway line and its environmental management. Some 1.2
billion yuan will be spent on environmental protection facilities
for the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, a record sum in this aspect
for rail construction in China.
At the design stage of this railway line, protection of
the ecological environment was the deciding factor in the
plan for the project. Protection of the ecological environment
has been an essential concern in the design of the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway. The routes were selected so that they would keep
away from the major habitats of wild animals. The original
design of the railway would have it passing through the
black-necked crane nature reserve on the middle reaches
of the Yarlungzangbo River. After many discussions, the
designers decided to select a circuitous route via Yangbajain,
to avoid disturbing the birds. But if avoidance was impossible,
such as the section cutting through the Hohxil, Qumar and
Soga nature reserves, the planners would compare several
designs, and put forward protection measures to minimize
disturbance to the nature reserves. Based on the investigations
and studies of the habits and migration patterns of the
wildlife along the railway line, the planners established
25 passageways for wild creatures at different sections
of the line. In designing bridges and tunnels, the designers
gave full consideration to the needs of wildlife crossing
the railway line. At many spots, special bridges were planned
to provide passageways for migrating wildlife so that the
normal life of these animals would be guaranteed as far
as possible. Hohxil is one of the habitats of the Tibetan
antelope, which faces the danger of extinction and is under
the State's first-grade protection. In June and July each
year, they form groups and travel long distances to Zhoine
and Taiyang lakes to breed. The builders of the railway
line stopped work for four days, withdrew workers and equipment
from the construction site and removed the colored flags
that would alert and frighten the Tibetan antelopes. The
animals eventually passed through the construction site
without being disturbed. To prevent damage to grasslands
and wetlands, the planners designed many special bridges.
The total length of bridges built for this railway line
in Tibet alone would reach 13 km.
When completed, the stations along the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
will use environment-friendly energy sources such as electricity,
solar energy and wind energy for heating. Garbage at the
stations will be collected for batch treatment. Domestic
sewage, after being treated to meet the State's discharge
standard, will be used, whenever possible, to water green
spaces. The passenger cars will be sealed. Garbage on the
trains will be collected in plastic bags which will be handed
over to stations along the plateau for batch treatment.
To suit the characteristics of the plateau, the central
station management mode will be adopted, with seven central
stations established along the line. Each of these stations
will be totally responsible for the trains' running and
maintenance in an area within a radius of 80 km. Wherever
possible, remote automatic control and mechanized maintenance
will be adopted to reduce the number of both the organizations
and their staff on the plateau, thereby giving maximum protection
to the natural eco-environment of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
Reducing the adverse impact of the railway construction
on the ecological environment to the minimum. To achieve
this goal, all the construction units have signed a responsibility
pledge for eco-environmental protection with the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway Construction Planning Office. The Office also requires
all construction units to formulate or improve rules and
regulations for protecting the ecological environment, and
establish environmental protection sections run by full-time
or part-time administrators. It is also imperative for the
construction units to take specific scientific measures
to protect the ecological environment; and their construction
plans must meet the requirements for environmental protection.
Competent governmental administration departments of land,
environmental protection and water conservancy and relevant
units responsible for design, supervision and construction
must work together to decide on the sites for taking and
discharging dirt and placing building materials such as
sand and stone. They should determine, according to the
availability of sunlight and hardness of ice, the appropriate
distance between those sites and the railway roadbeds, as
well as the traffic routes for workers and vehicles. Construction
and relevant activities should be done within the designated
areas to keep the permafrost stable. The headwaters and
wetlands along the railway line are to be specially protected
to avoid desertification in the headwaters areas, shrinkage
of wetlands, deterioration of grasslands and water pollution
that might be caused by the construction. Attention is to
be paid to the protection and regeneration of ground vegetation.
In places difficult for plants to grow and on the construction
sites and transportation routes, the turf should be preserved
and replanted in other places section by section, to be
moved back to cover the slopes of the roadbeds and construction
sites, so as to minimize the loss of ground vegetation.
Where natural conditions are relatively good, grass seeds
suitable for plateau areas should be carefully selected
and planted with appropriate means of cultivation to restore
as much as possible the ground vegetation that existed before
the railway construction. Where the natural conditions are
good enough, turf to be cultivated by manpower should be
tried out, supported by the techniques of spray sowing and
plastic film mulching. In the Tuotuo River area, where the
Yangtze River originates, test-planting of grass on plateau
roadbeds has been successful in the first stage. The railway
builders will take all measures to meet the environmental
requirements of the railway construction.
A key point in building the Qinghai-Tibet Railway is to
protect the ecological environment along the railway line.
All units involved in the construction are making great
efforts in this respect. The China Railway No. 14 Engineering
Bureau, for instance, has 13 key technical problems now
undergoing scientific research, of which half concern environmental
protection. There are six supervisors in this bureau who
are in charge of eco-environmental protection on the railway
construction sites. They are responsible for ensuring that
the camp sites, work-site access roads and passageways,
quarries, and sites for supplying dirt and digging trenches
take up as little space as possible. They are also responsible
for supervising accommodation facilities to ensure that
the delicate plateau vegetation is properly protected.
Taking effective measures to minimize the pollution that
the railway construction might cause to the plateau's ecological
environment. To achieve this goal, the construction units
have tried to use high-efficiency, low-noise and low-pollution
equipment. They have tried to adopt more mechanized ways
of construction and use as few administrators and workers
as possible on the work sites. Whenever possible, prefabricated
concrete components are carried to the construction sites
and assembled there. In order to avoid the pollution caused
by slurry around bridge-building sites, they use dry-boring
by rotary drills where possible. The Office requires that
all waste water from construction and camp sites be processed
to meet the corresponding sewage treatment standard before
discharge. Solid waste from construction sites and trash
from camp sites must be sorted out and recycled whenever
possible. Waste and trash that cannot be degraded should
be moved to appropriate places for batch treatment.
Strengthening supervision and inspection of environmental
protection to meet the protection requirements. An environmental
protection supervision system for a whole railway line was
first adopted for the Qinghai-Tibet Railway. The Office
entrusted a third party to supervise the environmental protection
work all along the line during the whole period of the railway
construction. To strengthen such supervision and inspection
work, the State Environmental Protection Administration
and the Ministry of Railways jointly issued the "Notification
on Strengthening the Supervision and Management of the Eco-environment
in the Building of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway," setting
out specific requirements for the environmental protection
and supervision work during the construction period. The
State Environmental Protection Administration, the Ministry
of Railways and other government departments concerned have
repeatedly sent inspection groups to supervise the implementation
of these environmental protection measures. Any violation
of the environmental protection regulations is severely
punished.
With the concerted efforts of all concerned it is justifiable
to believe that the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, as a plateau
railway up to the environmental protection standard, will
truly benefit the people of all ethnic groups in Tibet.