Premier Wen Jiabao on Thursday urged transport and traffic
system staff to work towards easing transportation pressures.
Railways, highways and waterways should be reasonably dispatched
and relevant departments, local governments and companies should
work together to ensure smooth flow, Wen told officials from the
ministries of railway and communications on Thursday afternoon.
Priority should be given to the transport of key materials such
as coal, oil, chemical fertilizer and grain.
Meanwhile, relevant departments should try to optimize
management and tap all potential transport capacity, Wen said.
Transportation safety should also be a top priority and safety
inspections should be made so that hidden risks can be
eliminated.
The construction of transport infrastructure should be sped up
so that they pay dividends as soon as possible, he said.
Systematic reforms in the railways and communications
departments should deepen, and service needs improved, Wen
added.
China's railways account for only 6 per cent of the world's
total, but shoulder 25 per cent of the freight volume in the world,
Xinhua News Agency reported.
To date, all the major trunk lines have been operating at full
capacity.
Due to the serious shortfall in freight capacity, only one-third
of the freight demand can be met at present, said the Ministry of
Railways.
But still, Chinese railways managed to further increase
transport of key materials for the nation's macro-control, said
Xinhua.
China's railways shipped 480 million tons of coal in the first
half of this year, up 12.2 per cent over the same period last
year.
Shipments of grain rose 13.1 per cent to 55.59 million tons,
chemical fertilizer and other materials for agriculture rose 5.6
per cent to 33.33 million tons, and oil rose 12.1 per cent to 58.67
million tons.
An official told Xinhua the ministry has allocated 90 per cent
of its cargo freight capacity to guarantee the transport of key
materials while trying to optimize the management, raise the train
speed and increase the freight load.
(China Daily July 31, 2004)