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Travellers At Risk From Global Warming On Tibet Railway

The chairman of the Tibetan Autonomous region, here to attend the current session of China's parliament, denied that the railway was unsafe but admitted that a train had derailed recently.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 10, 2007
Climate change could present a danger to travellers using the new railway to Tibet, according to China's top meteorologist Saturday. Passengers using the railway which opened last year and connects eastern China to Lhasa may be put at risk by the effect of climbing temperatures, Qing Dahe, head of China's Meteorological Bureau, told the Beijing Morning Post.

"Maintenance costs (for the railway) could be pushed up because of the unusual climatic conditions," he said. "Safety of passengers on the new railway and a new highway in Tibet could be affected by global warming."

Experts have voiced fears that parts of the track could become unstable, triggering derailments if warm weather melted frozen ground under the railway route.

The 1,142-kilometre (710-mile) track climbs a peak of 5,072 metres (16,737 feet) above sea level, making it the highest railway in the world.

The chairman of the Tibetan Autonomous region, here to attend the current session of China's parliament, denied that the railway was unsafe but admitted that a train had derailed recently.

"There was one derailing incident recently, but there were no casualties," Qiangba Puncog told a press conference on Thursday without giving further details.

Last year was China's hottest in half a century and more than a third of climate observation stations on the Tibet plateau registered all-time high temperatures, according to the China Meteorological Bureau.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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More Chinese Arriving In Tibet With New Railway
Lhasa, China (AFP) Mar 11, 2007
Eight months after its historic opening the railway to Tibet has already brought economic benefits to the remote region, but detractors continue to see the new line as a tool for Chinese colonisation. "I have returned home," said Wang Ping, a few days after stepping off the the train as it arrived in Lhasa.







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