Customer Services Site Navigation Bookmark This Page Recommend This Page Make Us Your Homepage
  Home  China Hotels China Flights China Tours China Travel
Guides
China Travel
Tools
China Travel
Forums
China Travel
Directory
China Travel Handbook China Tourist Attractions China Destination Guides FAQ on China Travel China Maps China Travel News
Your Are Here: China Travel Home > China Travel Guides > China Travel News > News in 2006 > News in June, 2006 > Garbage Train Will Run on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
Image of China Travel search Search our site:

China Travel News: | News in 2007 | News in 2006 | News in 2005 | News in 2004 |
| News in January, 2006 | News in March, 2006 | News in April, 2006 | News in May, 2006 | News in June, 2006 | News in July, 2006 | News in August, 2006 | News in September,2006 | News in October, 2006 | News in November, 2006 | News in December, 2006 |

Garbage Train Will Run on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway

Jun. 19, 2006
 
e-mail E-mail this page   print Printer-friendly page
 

A special train will collect garbage along the Qinghai-Tibet railway every week to protect the plateau environment.

 

Other measures have also been set in place to allay fears Hoh Xil, a nature reserve for endangered Tibetan antelopes, is under threat from the 1,142-kilometer railway which begins trial operation on July 1.

 

"Waste water discharge is banned along the railway," said Liu Xinduo, a senior engineer with the environment control and labor sanitation institute of the Academy of Railway Sciences.

 

Currently, disposing facilities have been built at 15 sites along the railway to treat waste water through means of bio-chemistry, electrochemistry and oxidation, Liu said.

 

The carriages are equipped with garbage collecting systems, which can compact refuse, said Ma Baocheng, deputy general manager of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway Company.

 

"All the garbage collected in train cars will be carried to Golmud or Lhasa for disposal," he said. "We have installed vacuum equipment to gather excrement in toilets and special facilities for gathering all kinds of waste on the train," Ma said.

 

Ma said his company has designated a special protection belt along the railway to reduce the contamination of the environment to a minimum.

 

China began constructing the railway in 2001 with cost of 26.2 billion yuan (US$3.16 billion). The Chinese government expects the project to boost Tibet's social and economic development, helping local residents to improve their living standards.

 

News Source: Xinhua News

Return
Recommended China Travel Links

Customer Services Site Navigation Bookmark This Page Recommend This Page Make Us Your Homepage
About Us | Contact Us | Link To Us | Recommend Us | Partner With Us | Advertise With Us | Travel Link Exchange Program
Link Policy | Terms of Use | Tour Service Terms | Advertising Terms | Privacy Policy
World Travel Resources

©Copyright 1999-2005 ChinaTravel.com Inc. All rights reserved. Site Map.


powered by Big Mediumi