China restores 350 kmph commercial bullet train

To ply between Beijing and Shanghai; maximum speed restored after it was reduced to 300 kmph following the July 2011 disaster that killed 40 people.

September 21, 2017 04:59 pm | Updated December 03, 2021 12:26 pm IST - BEIJING:

A Fuxing bullet train, travelling from Beijing to Shanghai, arrives at Jinan West Railway Station in Shandong Province, China on September 21, 2017 as the country restores the world’s fastest bullet train -- running at 350 kilometres per hour -- six years after it reduced the speed of its trains.

A Fuxing bullet train, travelling from Beijing to Shanghai, arrives at Jinan West Railway Station in Shandong Province, China on September 21, 2017 as the country restores the world’s fastest bullet train -- running at 350 kilometres per hour -- six years after it reduced the speed of its trains.

China on Thursday restored the maximum speed of bullet trains on the Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railway line to 350 kilometres per hour, making it the fastest commercially run train, six years after it reduced the speed due to a fatal accident.

The speed was reduced to 300 kilometres per hour following the deadly accident in July 2011 that killed 40 people.

A Fuxing bullet train departed from Beijing South Railway Station at 9:00 a.m. for Shanghai. The speed hike will cut the 1,318 km journey to 4 hours 28 minutes, cutting the train time by nearly an hour.

China started to run its first 350-kilometres per hour high speed train between Beijing and Tianjin in August 2008 and opened at least three more such high-speed lines nationwide in the following years.

But it has reduced the speed to 250 kilometres per hour to 300 kilometres per hour after the accident in July 2011. Forty people were killed and over 190 injured when two high-speed trains travelling on the Yongtaiwen railway line collided on a viaduct in the suburbs of Wenzhou, Zhejiang province.

The Fuxing trains were unveiled in June and are capable of top speeds of 400 kilometres per hour, state-run Xinhua news agency reported earlier.

On July 27, the Fuxing trains were tested for safety and reliability at maximum speed.

Seven trips a day

From September 21, these trains will make seven round trips each day.

The trains are entirely designed and manufactured in China, led by the China Railway Corporation. China holds complete intellectual property rights on the trains.

China has the world’s longest high-speed rail network of over 22,000 kilometers, about 60 per cent of the world’s total, the report said.

About one-third of China’s high-speed railways were designed to allow trains to run at a speed of 350 kilometres per hour, according to He Huawu of the China Academy of Engineering.

China is lobbying with India to build a high-speed train in the New Delhi-Chennai sector for which it is conducting a feasibility study.

Japan grabbed the India’s first contract to build the high-speed train between Mumbai and Ahmedabad for which the foundation stone was laid recently by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe.

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