China has made concerted efforts in
recent years to construct highways in its western region. Weng
Mengyong, vice minister of communications -- the ministry
responsible for land transportation -- said that the total length
of superhighway in the western region exceeded 7,000 kilometers as
of the end of 2003, and would exceed 10,000 kilometers by the end
of 2005.
In the country's northwest, the Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region has a total of 86,000 kilometers of
highways, according to the regional communications
department.
The department reports that
investment in highway construction has increased rapidly, from 3.0
billion yuan (US$360 million) in 2001 to 12.1 billion yuan (US$1.5
billion) in 2004.
Xinjiang built a total of 6,500
kilometers of highways in rural areas last year, adding 257
villages to the region's highway networks and benefiting 2.5
million people.
In October 2004, a
4,395-kilometer-long major national highway linking the New Silk
Road to the Asian highway network was completed. This reduced the
travel time from Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, to Lianyungang, a
port city in eastern Jiangsu
Province, from more than two weeks to just 50 hours.
During the next two decades,
Xinjiang will be investing a total of 200 billion yuan (US$24.1
billion) to build up its major highway networks, culminating in
what is called as the New Silk Road.
The total length of highways
nationwide is now 1.9 million kilometers, and superhighways extend
for some 34,200 kilometers.
(Xinhua News Agency, China.org.cn
February 16, 2005)
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