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China's high-speed rail revolution(4)

2015-01-26 08:44 chinadaily.com.cn Web Editor: Li Yan
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The first group of 10 electric locomotives imported from France were unloaded at Xingang Port, Tianjin on Monday. China will import a total of 300 such engines worth more than $540 million from France to upgrade its railway system. China Daily photo by Kang Xiaomin.

The first group of 10 electric locomotives imported from France were unloaded at Xingang Port, Tianjin on Monday. China will import a total of 300 such engines worth more than $540 million from France to upgrade its railway system. China Daily photo by Kang Xiaomin.

China used to be reliant on foreigners for railway engineering. Even a decade ago it was European knowhow behind high speed rail.

When China decided in 2004 to build its first high-speed railway, it imported trains from foreign makers such as the German conglomerate Siemens, the Japanese corporation Kawasaki and the French firm Alstom.

Chinese engineers then re-designed internal train components and built indigenous trains that can reach operational speeds of up to 380 km/h (240 mph).

Now the UK is eyeing China to help build its domestic lines, a project helping fuel China's high speed rail ambition. Indeed, the world has come full circle – given that the British first brought the technology to the troubled oriental country in the late nineteenth century during the Qing Dynasty.

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