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htc***
08-24-2010, 01:25 AM
Chinese traffic jam stretching over 100km/h expected to last a month

ONE traffic jam snaking into Beijing is 100km long and expected to last for a month.
Thousands of vehicles have been bogged down for more than 100km, and authorities now expect the jam will continue for a month.

The Beijing-Tibet expressway slowed to a crawl as heavy trucks line up to head to the capital, but were frustrated by road maintenance work that began five days later, the Global Times said.

Click here to see CNN footage of the massive traffic jam (http://edition.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/world/2010/08/23/china.traffic.jam.cctv.html)

A major cause of the congestion was maintenance work on the nearby National Expressway 110, which suffered damage from heavy vehicles, forcing drivers to use the Beijing-Tibet Expressway instead.

Coupled with several minor accidents and broken down cars, traffic has now been stranded on the expressway for the past nine days.

Drivers are playing cards to kill time, while local merchants are cashing in on the chaos by selling motorists food and water at exorbitant prices.

"Instant noodles are sold at four times the original price while I wait in the congestion," one driver told the Global Times. "Not only the congestion annoys me, but also those vendors."

The highway linking Beijing with the northern province of Hebei and the Inner Mongolia region, and has been regularly hit by massive jams to feed the insatiable demand of Beijing's 20 million people sucking in huge shipments of goods.

The roadway is also the major artery for the supply of coal to Beijing.

Once the biggest users of bicycles in the world, the Chinese are now buying 13.6 million cars a year, adding at least 650,000 vehicles to the road each year.

It shows how China's economic growth and booming car numbers are still outstripping the billions being spent on infrastructure.

The city authorities have sent 400 police to the area to try to calm the situation -- the second time in two months such a massive traffic snarl has occurred on the road that links the Chinese capital to Tibet.

"Insufficient traffic capacity on National Expressway 110 caused by maintenance construction since August 19 is the major cause of the congestion," a publicity officer with the Beijing Traffic Management Bureau told the Global Times this week.

"We've already sent traffic policemen to work on easing the traffic congestion."

The highway is designated for exclusive use by trucks, but the congestion mirrored the daily situation on the roads in most cities of any size in China.

In recent years, vehicle buying in the world's most populous nation has gathered pace. China last year passed the US for the first time as the world's biggest buyer of automobiles.

Car ownership is soaring fastest in China's biggest and richest cities such as Beijing and Shanghai.

About 650,000 new cars are estimated to be put on the road every year in the capital alone.

Helped by subsidies, the Chinese bought 13.6 million cars last year, exceeding by three million the estimates made by Ford in February last year.

This included truck sales of 650,000, meaning China was still comfortably ahead in terms of private car sales, which were 53 per cent higher than in 2008.

Vehicle sales are continuing to rise, although growth is slower than last year's highs. Sales of vehicles including buses and trucks increased 14.4 per cent in July to 1.24 million for the month, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

The Chinese government committed four trillion yuan ($660 billion) in 2008 to a two-year economic stimulus package, which has helped the country avoid the global recession. About 40 per cent of that has been spent on infrastructure but traffic congestion continues to grow.

One radical solution thrown up this month is a road-straddling mega-bus so big that cars can drive under it.

Proponents say this would eliminate the need to tunnel underground or build expensive bridges.

The elevated buses straddle the road on rails and provide enough clearance for other vehicles on the road - apart from large trucks - to drive beneath. This strategy would allow the buses to travel faster than the other traffic without the need for dedicated lanes or structures.

And construction of 15km of rail track is planned for Beijing's Mentougou district this year, with a further 170km if it is successful.


http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/world/chinese-traffic-jam-stretching-over-100kmh-expected-to-last-a-month/story-e6frf7lf-1225909285377

stevenma188
08-24-2010, 01:29 AM
Ya, driving in China is INSANE! Way too much traffic.

x_o_k_x
08-24-2010, 02:24 AM
lol they are repeating same video 3 times.. but thats insane!

AshMarks
08-26-2010, 12:04 AM
This is nuts !!

Thailand is horrible for traffic all the time. When drivers get to a red light they just pull their seat back and relax.

XTOTHEL
08-26-2010, 09:44 AM
hey guys hey guys, i heard a lot of the drivers eventually felt really congested but had no where to go. :gone

SilentJay
08-26-2010, 10:12 AM
hey guys hey guys, i heard a lot of the drivers eventually felt really congested but had no where to go. :gone

huh?

As a side note, I read yesterday that the traffic mysteriously vanished. The government officials were keeping mum about it, but reporters who went to investigate found nothing but a few cars clogged up at toll booths.

yearoftherat
08-26-2010, 10:27 AM
I'd like to see this happen here...:chuckle

stevenma188
08-26-2010, 12:20 PM
^Don't say that.... Toronto traffic is bad enough already.