Bullet Train South Korea

South Korea’s bullet train goes into service this week
SEOUL: South Korea’s first bullet train goes into service this week promising to transform people’s lives by easing the country’s chronic traffic congestion.
After 14 trillion won ($12 billion) of investment and years of delay caused by the 1997 Asian financial crisis and major engineering obstacles, the 300 kmh train will open for business on April 1 on two lines linking Seoul to Busan in the southeast and Mokpo in the southwest.
The construction of the new rail system, dubbed Korea Train Express (KTX), is considered a seminal national event here, on a par with the completion of South Korea’s first highway from Seoul to Busan, 428km south, in 1970.
Many more highways have been added since then, but road-building was overtaken by the number of vehicles in the intervening years, leaving South Korea’s transport costs among the highest in the world.
Kim Se-Ho, head of the state-run Korean National Railroad (KNR), said KTX would bring about “revolutionary changes to logistics and people’s lives.” “By mixing KTX with other means of transportation, you can reach anywhere in the country within a half day,” he said of the French technology-based bullet train.
Lifestyles will improve as people abandon congested cities for the countryside in search of cheaper rent and clean air and residents in provincial cities will be able to shop and see art performances in Seoul, he said.
Commuters will take 49 minutes travelling by train between Seoul and Daejeon, some 160km south, while motorists sit behind the wheel for more than an hour to reach downtown from the outskirts of the capital.
KTX covers the whole 410-km run from Seoul to Busan in 160 minutes although it has to slow down on old tracks used by conventional trains. The fastest conventional train covers the same distance in 240 minutes.
When the old tracks yield to new railbeds in 2010, the travel time will be cut to 116 minutes.
In its first year of service, KTX is expected to carry 180,000 passengers per day, enabling the Korean National Railway to cut back on slower services to free up those trains for cargoes.
Experts said the costs of road traffic congestion in South Korea have been increasing 13.5 per cent on average over the past 10 years to hit 22 trillion won ($18.7 billion) in 2002.
It amounts to 3.7 per cent of the country’s total Gross Domestic Product.
“KTX is equal to four Seoul-Busan highways in terms of logistics capacity,” Kim said, adding that KTX will save the country 1.85 trillion won ($1.6 billion) in logistics cost in 2005 alone.
Aside from logistical gains, the new railway system brought a leap forward to South Korea’s railway technology.
KTX will operate 46 sets of trains, 12 imported directly from Alstom of France and 34 others were assembled here.
With technology transfer from Alstom, KNR has successfully developed its own model, the G7.
“We plan to increase G7’s speed to 350km per hour,” Kim said, adding that South Korea seeks to export this model.
KTX recently took a group of diplomats and journalists on a test driving to Daejeon. The sleek silver-grey and blue train hit 307km at one point but passengers reported slightly more rolling and noise than the France’s TGV high-speed train.
Acting President Goh Kun expressed hope Wednesday that KTX would help South Korea emerge as a railway hub on the “Iron Silk Road” linking Northeast Asia and the Pacific to Europe.
“The high-speed railway will play a key role in helping the country become a logistics and economic hub of Northeast Asia,” he said at a ceremony marking the completion of the high-speed train line between Seoul and Mokpo.
“My dream is to travel to Pyongyang and all the way across Siberia to Europe by this high-speed train,” Kim said. – AFP


Be Sociable, Share!
Share
This entry was posted on Monday, October 30th, 2006 at 12:56 pm.
Categories: Salty Motors.

No Comments, Comment or Ping

Reply to “Bullet Train South Korea”

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word