The shipping capacity on the mainstream of the Yangtze River,
China's longest waterway, reached 795 million tons last year,
rating one of the most tapped rivers among the world's inland
rivers, official statistics show.
The handling capacity of ports along the river's mainstream
reached 650 million tons in 2005. The total throughput included 78
million tons of cargo in foreign trade and 2.6 million TEUs of
containers, said Jin Yihua, director of the Yangtze River
Navigation Affairs Administration.
The throughput on the mainstream was only 400 million tons in
2000.
The Chinese government attaches great importance to improving
the navigation conditions of the Yangtze, which is now playing an
increasingly crucial role in economic growth in the river valley
and becomes an vital link of international navigation.
In 2003, the Chinese government has decided to invest 16 billion
yuan (about 2 billion U.S. dollars) to dredge the navigation course
of the Yangtze before 2020.
A expansion project for the 10.5-m-deep navigation course has
been completed, which provide passage access to shipping vessels
with 50,000 dead-weight-tonnage through the Nanjing-Shanghai
section of the Yangtze River.
Buoys have been installed on the Nanjing-Liuhekou section of the
river, so as to ensure the passing ships' navigation safety.
Expanding navigation on the river has been prospering areas
along the mighty river. Currently, the Yangtze is flanked with
metallurgical, power, chemical, auto, building materials and
machinery industrial belts, along with more than 20 state-level
economic and technological, and high-tech development zones.
The shipping capacity of the river's mainstream is expected to
amount to 860 million tons this year, with the handling capacity of
its ports topping 750 million, including 90 million tons of cargo
in foreign trade and 3.1 million TEUs of containers, according to
its navigation authorities.
(Xinhua News Agency January 24, 2006)