Off the wire
Indian-controlled Kashmir governor urges New Delhi to enhance flood relief  • Bayern Munich's Ribery, Rafinha to miss season restart  • German inflation dips to negative for first time since 2009  • U.S. stocks open higher on upbeat jobless data  • China Focus: Tibetan Mastiff loses its shine in China  • China, Pakistan vow closer parliamentary links  • China denies mass foreign investment withdrawal  • China's inland province applies for free trade zone  • Man killed on Scorsese's "Silence" movie set in Taiwan  • China, France vow reciprocal cooperation in broader areas  
You are here:   Home

2.8 billion trips expected during spring festival in China

Xinhua, January 29, 2015 Adjust font size:

A total of 2.807 billion trips are expected to be made by Chinese people during the Spring Festival travel rush, according to the Ministry of Transport Thursday.

The number, which excludes trips through public buses and taxi, is 3.4 percent higher than the previous year, said Xu Chengguang, spokesman of the ministry.

The 40-day travel frenzy is known as "Chunyun", the hectic period surrounding Chinese New Year which falls this year on Feb. 19. Chunyun began on Feb. 4 and will last until March 16.

Several new high-speed railways have been built and put into operation in 2014 that will further help reduce crowds during the travel rush, Xu said.

China Railway Corporation earlier this month had announced plans to run more trains to cope with the travel rush.

Chinese New Year celebrations, known as Spring Festival, are China's most important family holiday, with hundreds of millions of people heading to their hometowns to meet with relatives and old friends, putting huge stress on transportation system.

Chinese people have never been more affluent and keen to travel, nor have there ever been more migrant workers in cities far from home. Every year, stress on the transportation system becomes greater and greater, despite great improvements in infrastructure over the last few years.

The transport networks -- road, rail, aviation and waterways -- have set new highs for "Chunyun" numbers almost every year in the past decade.

Railways are expected to see a rise of 10 percent in passenger trips year on year, a greater rise than any other transport options, official data showed. Endi