Electric cars will replace current motor vehicles during the 2008
Beijing Olympic Games in serving Olympic family members and
tourists, to fulfill Beijing's commitments that all vehicles used
during the event burn clean energy.
By
the time the Olympics take place, a motorcade consisting of
domestic electric vehicles will take shape, expected to be the
biggest fleet of its kind in China, according to Fan Boyuan,
director of the Beijing Municipal Committee of Science and
Technology.
The city has also assured that all the other buses and taxis
provided to the Games use clean energy such as natural gas to
guarantee a "Green Olympics."
As
part of the 863 National High Technology Plan by the Ministry of
Science and Technology during the 10th Five-Year Plan (2001-05), a
special research project on electric vehicles began last year with
an investment of 880 million yuan (US$106 million).
The research resulted in the establishment of China's first ever
electric motorcar industrialized production base this month in
Wuhan in Central China's Hubei Province, Xinhua reported.
With an investment of 200 million yuan (US$24 million), the base is
expected to achieve industrialization in the production of electric
cars in the coming three years, said Huang Zhaoqin, manager of the
Dongfeng Electrical Motorcar Company.
The waste gas released by this experimental car 50 percent less
than the traditional cars.
Cars have become the choice means of transport for 20 percent of
the people in the city compared to only 9 percent 10 years ago,
according to statistics released by the Beijing Transport
Development Research Center.
Beijing now owns at least 2.5 million motor vehicles, which have
put pressure on the road network and the environment of the
capital.
This has led some experts to advise adopting restrictive policies
to bring this sharp increase of cars under control.
"Although there is no clear restriction upon privately owned cars
now, I advise the municipal government to adopt measures in guiding
the usage of cars in a more reasonable way," said Liu Xiaoming,
vice-president of Beijing Polytechnic University.
(China Daily September 20, 2002)
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