Deadly Crash Adds to Worries About China’s High-Speed Trains


A deadly train wreck in south China has renewed concerns about the country’s rapid and costly development of a high-speed rail network. The collision of two high-speed trains Saturday evening near the city of Wenzhou in Zhejiang province killed 33 people and injured 191, according to China’s Ministry of Railways. The crash occurred when train D3115 lost power while traveling between Hangzhou and Fuzhou, possibly because of a lightning strike during a thunderstorm. Another train traveling on the same tracks, D301, slammed into the back of D3115, knocking at least two and possibly as many as six carriages off a railway bridge that stood 15 meters (49 feet) above the ground below.

The D series trains, which can travel at speeds up to 250 kph (155 mph), were introduced in 2007 and are from an early generation of China’s high-speed rail development. Saturday’s crash is the deadliest since 2008, when 72 people were killed after a regular passenger train collided with an express train that had derailed in Shandong province.

The swiftness with which China has developed its high-speed rail network has prompted some envy in the West, where strained government budgets and the compromise and deliberation of democracy make such massive undertakings impossible. But in recent months some of the shine has come off China’s remarkable rail acceleration. In February Liu Zhijun, who as minister of railways was responsible for the ambitious expansion of high-speed rail, was sacked and later arrested on suspicion of widespread corruption. In April Liu’s replacement announced that the rail network would lower its top speeds, a move that was seen as a step to lowering costs. Many average Chinese had complained that despite the massive investment in trains, tickets were still hard to come by at peak periods, and the high-speed routes were too expensive for average passengers.

The launch of high-speed service between Beijing and Shanghai earlier this month was plagued by electrical outages and other malfunctions that caused delays and left passengers stranded, problems that hit other parts of the network in recent weeks. Those troubles were dismissed by experts as the sort of normal bugs that will crop up in the launch of any large, complicated system like new rail line. But if Saturday’s crash is any indication, the troubles faced by China’s rail system are far more serious than mere growing pains.

Related Topics: Beijing, crash, high-speed rail, Liu Zhijun, Shanghai, trains, Asia, China, Infrastructure, Uncategorized
  • Latest on Global Spin

    Benjamin Hiller/Corbis

    Must-Reads from Around the World, May 22, 2012

    Summit Struggle - Ahead of Wednesday’s crunch E.U. summit, Der Spiegel reports that new French President François Hollande will pressure German Chancellor Angela Merkel to agree to euro bonds, which she has so far strictly opposed. “Italy and Britain are expected to back Hollande in a further sign that Merkel is increasingly isolated in Europe with her austerity plan for saving the euro,” the German news magazine predicts.

    Yin Dongxun/Xinhua/ZUMAPRESS.com

    Jerusalem Day in the Old City: The Conflict Marches On

    Sunday was Jerusalem Day in Israel, a holiday once again observed by thousands of young Jews who chanted as they marched through Arab neighborhoods conquered in the 1967 Six Day War. The tension is always highest in the narrow passages of the largely Palestinian Old City. So much so that the city’s police this year tried to route the column of youths — most singing patriotic and religious songs, a few chanting “Death to the Arabs” — away from the Arab Quarter. But in the end, the police proved powerless against tradition, and the original route was restored. On Jerusalem Day, marching through the Arab Quarter is the whole point.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    Obama’s Afghanistan Problem: Neither Karzai Nor the Taliban Like the ‘Reconciliation’ Script

    President Barack Obama huddled with President Hamid Karzai in Chicago on Sunday, urging Afghanistan’s leader to accelerate negotiations with the Taliban over a political solution to the longest war in America’s history. But the prospect for Karzai negotiating successfully with the insurgents is clouded by a question raised by Josef Stalin, on the eve of World War II, in response to the suggestion that he offer concessions to the Pope: “How many divisions does he have?” The Taliban now ask the same question about Karzai. And should the Afghan leader also ask himself the question, he might reach a similarly dispiriting conclusion. Karzai’s independent power base is minimal, as is his ability to influence the outcome of his country’s civil war absent direct U.S. involvement. And that gives neither Karzai nor the Taliban much incentive to cut a deal with the other.

blog comments powered by Disqus