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        Business / Train ticket

        Faster but costly, high-speed train sparks controversy

        (Xinhua) Updated: 2011-01-18 15:50

        Faster but costly, high-speed train sparks controversy

        Two passengers on the south square of th Shanghai Railway Station?are on their?his way back home on Jan 18. [Photo / Xinhua] 

        BEIJING - When waves of people anxiously begin their journey back home for the Spring Festival, the Chinese lunar New Year, migrant worker Liu Weidong finally was able to purchase three tickets for his family, and now has a lighter purse but heavier heart.

        "We were only able to get tickets for the high-speed trains. They were more costly than the ordinary ones," said the man in his 40s.

        Liu and his wife are from east China's Jiangxi province and began working in Hangzhou, capital city of Zhejiang province, a few years ago.

        In the past, the ordinary train tickets cost them 76 yuan ($11) apiece.

        This year, due to the operation of high-speed trains, the number of ordinary trains in service was reduced and cheaper tickets for traveling in these ordinary trains were hard to get.

        Liu's wife queued for five hours, but still could not purchase tickets for ordinary trains and the price of a ticket for a second-class seat on the high-speed train plying the railroad between Hangzhou and Nanchang, capital of Jiangxi, was 199 yuan.

        Therefore, a rail journey back home this year will cost the family an extra 400 yuan, which was about one-third of Liu's monthly salary.

        "The time for the rail journey will be, indeed, cut by several hours by traveling in the high-speed train, but I would rather stand for 40 hours in the ordinary train, which is normally crowded," Liu said.

        "To us, 400 yuan is a lot of money. With the money, we can buy many things for the festival."

        More speedy, comfortable, but expensive

        In fact, Liu's remarks reflected the concerns of many migrant workers and students.

        Spring Festival, which will fall on Feb 3 this year, is the most important traditional festival in China and an occasion for reunions of family members and friends.

        The peak travel season during the festival, or Chunyun, which has been dubbed as the "largest migration on the planet", will start on Wednesday.

        An estimate by the Ministry of Railways suggests that during the 40-day period, about 230 million trips will be made on China's railway system.

        China has the ambition to build the world's fastest rail network as rail cars with the name "China Railway High Speed (CRH)" began appearing in growing numbers in recent years.

        According to the Ministry of Railways, China will have a rail network of 110,000 kilometers by 2012, with 13,000 kilometers of high-speed rail.

        The latest milestone was high-speed trains between Shanghai and Hangzhou, which began service last October.

        The prices for first- and second-class seats from Hangzhou to Shanghai soared by 108 and 56 percent, respectively.

        At the same time, the number of ordinary trains in service has dwindled. "Before 2010, about dozens of ordinary trains shuttled between Hangzhou and Nanchang," said Liu Weidong, the migrant worker.

        "After four pairs of CRH trains were put into service, however, only ten ordinary train services are still available, making it harder to get cheaper train tickets."

        The situation is similar elsewhere.

        A high-speed train service between Shanghai and Jiangsu province started operating on July 1 last year. Meanwhile, 25 express trains between Shanghai and Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu, ceased operations.

        Ma Xinhua from the Zhejiang University of Technology said that 90 percent of the students in his department chose to travel in high-speed trains, though many of them had their expenses doubled because of the travel.

        Han Xiaoyang, another college student, feared that ordinary trains would be gradually replaced by high-speed ones. Her expense budget was 600 yuan a month.

        Yet the ticket for the lowest-class seat on the high-speed train from Chengdu to Beijing would cost her 322 yuan.

        At the same time, trains are becoming increasingly luxurious, which have also helped push up ticket prices.

        Dubbed the "most luxurious trains in history", high-speed trains plying between Shanghai and Chengdu, as well as Shanghai and Chongqing, started operations on Jan 11.

        Soft berths on trains on both rail routes were all equipped with audio-video displaying system.

        Within high-class sleeping carriages with cushioned berths on the trains, there were also small meeting rooms.

        The highest price for a soft berth in the trains plying between Shanghai and Chengdu tops 2,330 yuan, about the price for a night in a 5-star hotel.

        Criticism and suggestion

        Sun Zhang, a transportation professor with Shanghai-based Tongji University, suggested that in the peak travel season, limited traffic resources be reserved for the needy, low-income passengers.

        "Like the migrant workers, they can only go home once a year," he said.

        Related readings:
        Faster but costly, high-speed train sparks controversy High-speed railway to boost trade
        Faster but costly, high-speed train sparks controversy Vice Premier stresses safety of high-speed railway
        Faster but costly, high-speed train sparks controversy New railway to open in eastern Hainan island
        Faster but costly, high-speed train sparks controversy Expensive railway set for its maiden journey

        "They would rather stand. So can we transform the berth to seats to reduce the cost and improve the capacity?"

        Also, columnist Xin Haiguang suggested that government provide subsidies to the railway system to reduce ticket prices.

        "To some extent, the railways in China are linked to the public interests and we shouldn't solely pursue commercial profits," he said.

        Migrant worker Liu Weidong said he was lucky, as some of his fellow migrant workers who couldn't get ordinary train tickets nor afford the high prices for tickets to travel in high-speed trains, had to give up on the idea of going home during the Spring Festival.

        "The high-speed and luxurious trains were for the rich, which has nothing to do with us," Liu said.

        "If there is not a fast train, we can take a slower one. If there are no seats we can stand during the journey," he said. "But don't leave us one choice."

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