The Associated Press
BEIJING -- China on Wednesday opened the world's longest high-speed rail
line that more than halves the time required to travel from the
country's capital in the north to Guangzhou, an economic hub in southern
China.
The opening of the 1,428-mile line was
commemorated by the 9 a.m. departure of a train from Beijing for
Guangzhou. Another train left Guangzhou for Beijing an hour later.
China has massive resources and considerable prestige invested in its showcase high-speed railways program.
But
it has in recent months faced high-profile problems: part of a line
collapsed in central China after heavy rains in March, while a bullet
train crash in the summer of 2011 killed 40 people. The former railway
minister, who spearheaded the bullet train's construction, and the
ministry's chief engineer, were detained in an unrelated corruption
investigation months before the crash.
Trains on the
latest high-speed line will initially run at 186 mph with a total travel
time of about eight hours. Before, the fastest time between the two
cities by train was more than 20 hours.
The line also makes stops in major cities along the way, including provincial capitals Shijiazhuang, Wuhan and Changsha.
More
than 150 pairs of high-speed trains will run on the new line every day,
the official Xinhua News Agency said, citing the Ministry of Railways.
Railway
is an essential part in China's transportation system, and the
government plans to build a grid of high-speed railways with four
east-west lines and four north-south lines by 2020.
The
opening of the new line brings the total distance covered by China's
high-speed railway system to more than 5,800 miles - about half its 2015
target of around 11,000 miles.