On Aug 24, 3:59*am, "Brenda Ann"
wrote:
"D. Peter Maus" wrote in ...
On 8/24/10 24:46 , wrote:
On Aug 23, 7:36 pm, wrote:
Only the Toyotas kept on going.
cuhulin
What is their mysterious energy source?
* Arrogance.
Many Asian countries have traffic problems like this a few times a year.
Traffic Jam in China: Bloomberg Says Coal is the Reason Why
http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=htt...1SUNdWPG Dlxw
Chinese Demand for Coal Spurs 9-Day Traffic Jam on Expressway
August 24, 2010, 2:37 AM EDT
Aug. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Chinese demand for coal to produce electricity
for the world’s fastest-growing major economy is creating traffic
jams
lasting as long as nine days on roads connecting mines in the
nation’s
hinterland to its eastern ports.
Thousands of trucks were stuck along the Beijing-Tibet Expressway for
as many as nine days, China Business News reported today. The
blockage, which began to ease yesterday, was created by a surge in
trucks carrying coal from the province of Inner Mongolia, the
newspaper reported. Road maintenance since Aug. 19 has been a major
cause of the congestion, the Global Times newspaper said today.
Inner Mongolia passed Shanxi province last year to become China’s
biggest coal supplier after the government closed mines on safety
concerns following a series of deadly accidents in Shanxi. A dearth
of
railway capacity connecting Inner Mongolia to port cities such as
Caofeidian, Qinhuangdao and Tianjin, where coal is shipped to power
plants in southern China, has forced suppliers to rely on trucks.
“The situation may ease in three or four years, when rail capacity
from Inner Mongolia to Caofeidian gets upgraded and the new rail line
to Liaoning province starts,” David Fang, a director at the China
Coal
Transport and Distribution Association, said by telephone today.
China plans to build a 300-kilometer (190-mile) railway from Inner
Mongolia to Huludao city in Liaoning, the official Xinhua News Agency
reported in March.