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Construction of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway,
recently approved by the Chinese Government, will not bring
"ecological disasters" to the project area, a
senior Chinese engineer said on February 15.
On
the contrary, the project will play a key role in protecting
the ecological environment on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau,
said Ran Li, chief engineer with the No.1 Survey and Design
Institute under the Ministry of Railways
(MOR).
The 1, 1 8 0-kilometer railway, the
first one linking the Tibet Autonomous Region with the rest
of China, will extend from Lhasa in Tibet to Golmud in
Qinghai Province, northwest China. It will be the
longest and most elevated railway to be built on highlands
in the world.
Ran said that the claim that the
railway will bring "ecological disasters" to
Qinghai and Tibet is totally groundless.
Ran
said that to find ways for constructing railways on earth
that has been frozen for a long time, his institute and the
Northwest Branch of the Science Research Institute,
affiliated with the MOR, has launched a series of
experiments and research on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau since
the 1960s.
According to Ran, they conducted
experiments in areas with an elevation of 4,750 meters,
building roadbed, bridges, houses and water supply and
drainage systems. A "green belt" will be
built along the planned railway, Ran said.
More
than 960 kilometers, or over four-fifths of the railway will
be built at an altitude of over 4,000 meters. And
more than half of it will be laid on earth that has been
frozen for a long period of time.
Ran said,
based on their experiments, they have worked out measures to
protect frozen earth during the process of the
project.
To protect animal and plant resources
in the Hoh Xil, Qiangtang and other nature reserves in the
area, more bridges and passages for animals will be built on
the section of the Qinghai-Tibet railway in the nature
reserve zones, Ran added.
More measures are to
be taken to keep a clean environment along the railroad,
such as closed passenger trains will be arranged on the rail
line, and the garbage on the trains will be treated in
designated places.
Ran said, people who live in
the area along the soon-to-be-constructed railway mainly bum
timber and animal manure to cook meals and for other daily
life purposes, which is detrimental to local fragile
ecological environment.
The Qinghai-Tibet
Railway, upon completion, is to play a very important role
in protecting environment on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, as
it can serves major passage through which coal, petroleum
and other energy resources can be transported into Tibet
from northwest China, Ran said.
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