Construction work is expected to start by the end of this year
on the maglev railway between China's largest metropolis Shanghai
and Hangzhou, a famous tourist destination and capital of east
China's
Zhejiang Province.
The feasibility study of the project which uses magnetically
levitated or maglev trains to whisk passengers to their
destinations almost as fast as jet aircraft, will be assessed in
the near future, government sources in Shanghai said on
Thursday.
The principal of a magnet train is that floats on a magnetic
field and is propelled by a linear induction motor. Maglev trains
travel extremely fast because there is no friction.
With a total length of 175 kilometers, the Shanghai-Hangzhou
maglev railway is expected to go into operation before 2010 when
Shanghai will host the World Expo.
Total cost of the project is estimated at 35 billion yuan
(around US$4.3 billion).
Trains on the maglev railway will reach speed of 450 kilometers
per hour, but will be limited to under 200 kilometers per hour in
the city downtown areas. It will take passengers only 30 minutes to
travel from Shanghai to Hangzhou. It currently takes 140 minutes to
travel between the cities by rail.
This will be the second one if its kind in the country after the
line in Shanghai-based Pudong Airport.
(Xinhua News Agency April 4, 2006)