Infrastructure has brought China forward over the last 70 years
Editor’s Note:
70 years ago, when China was
still in the ruins of war and buildings were waiting to be constructed, people
did not expect that it would turn into an infrastructure giant so soon that is
now even helping others to build bridges, ports and rails overseas.
The country did not stop at that
hard-won level of achievement. Building on efforts, sweat and the innovation of
millions of Chinese people, now, when new technologies such as 5G and AI are
transforming the world and the way people live, the country is on its way to
take the lead again in the new era. It seeks to bridge the world, and to
promote joint development for the benefit of the world.
It was the development of
infrastructure that dragged China forward, and it will also be infrastructure
that does this in the future.
During
its overall growth in the past 70 years, China’s achievements in infrastructure
are its most obvious and they are recognized by the world. Such achievements
can easily be seen through a slew of ‘world’s firsts’ that the country has
gained over recent decades.
The
Three Gorges Dam, the world’s biggest hydropower project in terms of
electricity production; China’s South-to-North Water Diversion Project, the
biggest water transfer project globally, which benefits 100 million people; the
world’s longest pipelines, the giant West-East Gas Pipeline project with a
length of 8,704 km; the world’s highest railway, The Qinghai-Tibet railway,
with its highest point reaching an altitude of 5,072 m; the world’s longest
cross-sea bridge, the 55 km-long Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge; and the world’s
longest underwater tube tunnel at 6.7 km, to name but a few.
Notably,
China also has the largest mileage of any high-speed railway in the world. By
the end of 2018, the total mileage of the high-speed railway in service was
30,000 km, which accounted for more than two-thirds of the total mileage of
high-speed railways in the world.
According
to media reports, 2.98 billion passenger trips were made during the 40-day
Spring Festival travel rush in 2019. Trips taken country-wide within one year
could circle the earth seven or eight times if they were placed one after
another in a line.
And that
mileage is still far from fulfilling domestic demand, particularly during the
holidays when people have to scramble for tickets home.
China
aims to put a further 3,200 km of high-speed rail lines into operation in 2019.
Hard-earned achievements
When new
China was founded in 1949, it was in chaos after decades of war. Highways,
railways…the transportation infrastructure began almost entirely from scratch
and developed with an astonishing speed into what can be seen today, Tian Yun,
vice director of the Beijing Economic Operation Association, told the Global Times on Monday, September 23.
From
1949 to 2018, the country’s transport network saw notable expansion. By the end
of 2018, the total railway operation mileage reached 131,000 km, five times
higher than in 1949, according to a report by the National Bureau of Statistics
(NBS).
Inland
waterways have expanded 72.7 percent to 127,000 km in mileage, while civil
aviation flight routes surged 734 times from the figure in 1950, to 8.38
million km in 2018.
Telecom
networks also reported fast expansion. The number of postal service branches
increased 9.4 times over the seven decades, reaching 275,000 across the
country. China’s mobile broadband network users topped 1.31 billion in 2018.
Starting
from almost zero to the world’s major infrastructure power today, such
achievements do not come from nowhere.
They
were built upon the years of efforts and hard work from millions of Chinese
citizens who were willing to make selfless contributions.
The CRRC
Qingdao Sifang Rolling Stock Research Institute Co (CRRC SRI), which provided
key technologies for Beijing’s first metro train and China’s first double-deck
passenger train, is among the companies that made China into the major
infrastructure power that it is today.
It has
played an important technical supporting role in China’s six large-scale
railway speed-up projects, and has independently developed an air-conditioning
oxygen supply system, an electrical system and air springs for Qinghai-Tibet
trains, to assist Chinese trains to run safely on the “roof of the world.”
“Since
the founding of our company 60 years ago, we have always insisted on
independent innovation, providing core systems and key products for the rail
transit industry. Our many core technologies, such as traction converters,
couplers and draft gear, the anti-vibration system, and TCMS, have been applied
to China’s Standard EMU and the ‘Fuxing’ EMU,” the head of CRRC SRI told the Global Times on Tuesday.
“Meanwhile,
we have applied technology innovation for high-speed trains to the urban rail
field, which is the first time China has achieved the integration of the three
systems of traction, network and braking, and on this basis has built intelligent
trains.”
China’s
infrastructure development has not slowed after the achievements that have been
made thus far. In the future, with the rolling out of regional jets and
domestically manufactured large aircrafts, China will usher in an upsurge in
the aviation industry, including the new rail transit which has been developed
and is in full swing in China, according to Tian.
“While
China has built a strong infrastructure team, it has also developed its own
construction machinery and equipment, which utilizes technology that is in a
leading global position. China does not simply use manpower to complete bridge
construction projects as we see in videos on the internet, but uses a lot of
domestic and large mechanical equipment. And the quality, the technology and
the cost performance are competitive around the world,” Tian said.
Linking the world
With its
world-leading infrastructure building capacity, China is now eyeing overseas
markets in an effort to link the world with its capabilities in the sector.
“China
is now the largest country receiving orders for infrastructure projects
overseas, ranking first in the world for more than ten years in a row. The
value of orders every year exceeds hundreds of billions of US dollars,” Tian
said.
The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), proposed by China in
2013, aims to build a trade and infrastructure network connecting Asia with
Europe, Africa and beyond. It is a vivid example of how China can connect the
world with its infrastructure experience.
After
years of unremitting effort, the BRI has seen numerous achievements. With
increasing collaboration on ports, railways, highways, electricity, aviation
and communications, infrastructure development along the Belt and Road has been
effectively upgraded, with better-than-expected results.
Additionally,
ports are better connected than other transportation facilities between China
and other nations along the Belt and Road. China maintains the top worldwide
ranking in maritime connectivity, with shipping routes connecting its ports to
over 200 nations and 600 major ports.
As for
railway connections, the cumulative number of trips made by China-Europe
freight trains exceeded 12,000 in 2018, with annual shipments reaching $16
billion, compared with only 17 trips and less than $600 million in 2011.
Total
trade between China and other BRI countries amounted to $6.47 trillion over the
2013-18 period. More than 80 overseas economic and trade cooperation zones were
built, and more than 244,000 jobs created for locals.
Bridge to the future
Regarding
the intelligent era, Tian again stressed the importance of infrastructure
capacity as it also provides an important foundation for China to realize
industrialization and urbanization in the future, led by information technology.
“Today,
no matter whether it is China or the US, if anyone wants to reindustrialize,
there is no platform to support it without technology in infrastructure,” Tian
said.
“We
should also watch construction in the information age, including intelligent manufacturing
and smart city construction, which are not the same as in the past. For
example, there is high-speed communication [systems] like 5G, cloud computing,
cloud servers, and dispersion of data stored in huge clouds, artificial
simulation and artificial intelligence (AI). China has also seen good
achievements in these fields of infrastructure,” Tian said.
Source:Global Times
(Graphics from Global Times)
Infrastructure has brought China forward over the last 70 years
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