China achieved great progress in improving its roads and railways
and its civil aviation sector in the ninth Five-Year Plan period
(1996-2000).
China is expected to have invested 890 billion yuan (US$107 billion)
in the construction of roads by the end of the period. This amount
is five times more than that spent on the construction of roads
in the previous five-year plan period.
By the end of 2000, China will have 1.4 million kilometers of roads,
240,000 kilometers of which will have been built in the past five
years.
The country invested especially heavily in the building of seven
major expressways across China in the period.
By the end of 2000, 12,000 kilometers of those seven arterial roads
will have been finished, accounting for 72 percent of their total
length.
The remaining 4,000 kilometers is expected to be finished in the
early part of the 10th Five-Year Plan period (2001-05).
The quality of roads has also improved in the past five years.
China will have 15,000 kilometers of expressways and 185,000 kilometers
of second standard roads by the end of this year.
High quality roads will account for 13.2 percent of the nation's
total road length. The proportion in 1995 was 8.4 percent.
As for the railways, China will have invested 245 billion yuan
(US$29 billion) in them during the ninth Five-Year Plan period.
This is double the amount invested on the railways in the eighth
Five-Year Plan period (1991-95).
Some 5,100 kilometers of new railways as well as 3,200 kilometers
of dual-track railways and 3,900 kilometers of electric railways
are expected to be finished by the end of this year.
Local governments are expected to finish building 700 kilometers
of railways by the year end.
By the end of this year, China will have 68,000 kilometers of rail
track under operation, 6,000 kilometers longer than in the eighth
Five-Year Plan period.
Some arterial railways linking China's west and south have been
brought into operation during the past five years and the pressure
on railway transportation between the two regions has consequently
greatly decreased.
China invested 92 billion yuan (US$11 billion) on the civil aviation
industry in the ninth Five-Year Plan period. Some 66 billion yuan
(US$7.9 billion) of this was used to build airports.
By the end of this year, some 40 airports being built or rebuilt
in the period will be completed and brought into operation.
China will have 129 civil airports by 2000, 11 more than in 1995.
In 2000, civil flights are expected to carry 64 million passengers,
a 63 percent increase from 1995.
China had 278 domestic air routes in 1995, and there are now 990.
International flights increased by 45 to hit 130 by this year.
In the past five years, China has developed a convenient air service
network covering Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, and the country's
aero plane maintenance and repair technology has also seen sharp
improvement. China now can repair nearly all brands and types of
planes in the world.
The nation invested 6 billion yuan (US$720 million) in upgrading
its radar and air control systems in the past five years.
China has now mastered advanced airspace regulation and guidance
systems for both the civil and the military aviation sectors.
(China Daily 10/30/2000)
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