Archive for the ‘Transport’ Category

Yushu update

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Map showing some areas affected by the 14 April 2010 Yushu earthquake: Jiegu Town, Longbao Town, Haxiu Village, Lixin Village

  • The round-trip from Xining to Longbao took 52 hours along some very dangerously icy roads; we saw more than 10 relief vehicles that had come off the road, left to be recovered at a later date. At points we were forced off-road by the earthquake damage, which made the journey even tougher on the vehicle.
  • We eventually arrived in Longbao town at 11pm, met with officials and donated the goods we had brought. The most pressing needs in the area are tents and and medicines. (The 8,000 residents of Longbao had already used up 50,000 assorted tablets in the first 2-3 days.) We were also made aware of two other, more remote villages that are still in need of relief: Ha Xiu Village (哈秀乡), population 3,000, and Li Xin Village (立新乡), population 2,000.

20090403: Xinhua: China’s quake-hit Sichuan aims to finish most rebuilding by 2010

Monday, April 6th, 2009

China’s quake-hit Sichuan aims to finish most rebuilding by 2010
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-03 10:57:58

Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
CHENGDU, April 3 (Xinhua) — Southwest China’s Sichuan Province said it would accelerate post-quake rebuilding in an effort to finish most of the work by September 2010, a year ahead of schedule.
The goal is to complete 85 percent of the reconstruction projects and ensure “housing and employment for each family,” according to a provincial meeting for accelerating reconstruction held Thursday.
The completion targets cover more than 90 percent of transport projects, 98 percent of power grids and 99 percent of public service projects such as medical care.
The meeting said 85 percent of the rebuilding work in worst-hit areas, and all work except for some major projects in less-affected areas, would be completed by September 2010.
Reconstruction of rural housing will be completed at the end of this year, with that in townships and cities to be finished before May 2010.
Students who now attend classes in temporary building are to be back in permanent structures by next spring.
The magnitude-8.0 quake that hit southwest China, centered in Wenchuan, Sichuan, on May 12 last year, killed more than 69,000 people. It also left nearly 18,000 missing, more than 374,000 injured and millions homeless.
The Sichuan government estimated post-quake rebuilding will cost about 1.6 trillion yuan (235 billion U.S. dollars)

20090303: Xinhua: Macao SAR to finance reconstruction projects

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Macao SAR to finance 10 reconstruction projects
2009-03-03  来源:新华网

On Tuesday 3rd March 2009, Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR) signed an agreement with China’s quake-hit Sichuan province, which will see the SAR finance 10 reconstruction projects in Guangyuan city, Sichuan, according to a press release from the SAR government.

The 10 projects include the rebuilding of roads, bridges, river embankment, and sewage treatment works in Guangyuan city, for which the SAR government will allocate 687 million yuan (102 million U.S. dollars), according to the press release.
The agreement was signed in Sichuan’s capital Chengdu by Chui Sai On, the Macao SAR’s Secretary for Social Affairs and Culture, and representatives of the Sichuan Provincial Government.
The 8.0-magnitude quake centered in Sichuan’s Wenchuan County, which took place on May 12 last year, left more than 69,000 people dead, 374,000 injured, 18,000 missing and millions homeless, according to official statistics.
The government of the Macao SAR has already signed a general agreement with the Sichuan provincial government, under which the SAR will finance the reconstruction projects in the quake-stricken province located in south western China. According to the agreement, Macao SAR will spend an amount of 5.5 billion patacas (688 million U.S. dollars) funding the rebuilding projects in some counties of Sichuan.
The Macao SAR government initiated the financing of seven reconstruction projects in Guanyuan last year, and, with the agreement to finance the above 10 projects signed, a total of 17 Macao-financed rebuilding projects in Guangyuan have been launched so far, according to the press release.
After completing the financial arrangements of the 17 projects, the SAR government said it would continue to assess another 19 rebuilding projects mainly of education and sports facilities.

20090220: draft of feasibility study of Central Reserve Depot of Relief Supplies completed

Friday, February 27th, 2009

中央级救灾物资储备库年底建成

20. 来源:成都商报

According to the Sichuan Provincial Bureau of Civil Affairs, the draft of the feasibility study on Central-level Reserve Depot of Relief Supplies, which is planned to be installed in Shuangliu Logistics Park, was finished a few days ago. The 150-mu-occupying reserve depot is expected to go into service by the end of the year.

记者昨日从四川省民政厅获悉,成都中央级救灾物资储备库工程项目可研报告初稿已于日前完成。储备库初步规划占地150亩,选址在双流空港物流园区。今年内将全面完成建设任务。

20090109: Xinhua: Snow adds woes to quake-stricken county in China’s Sichuan

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Snow adds woes to quake-stricken county in China’s Sichuan
2009-01-09
BEICHUAN, Sichuan, Jan. 9 (Xinhua) — “Damn it, I can’t brake.” The driver’s desperate yell left everyone in a cold sweat.
But the Volkswagen Touareg stopped in time – its rear wheels merely 30 cm from the cliff. Xinhua reporter Liu Dajiang describes Thursday’s trip to Beichuan as “incredibly perilous.”
He said: “It was a life-and-death moment. The SUV that was driving uphill suddenly slid back toward the 2,180-meter tall cliff.”
The icy mountain road that served as a lifeline in Beichuan, a county that was reduced to rubble by the strong earthquake of May 12, was as slippery as glass. The road, connecting 12 outlying towns and villages, was covered with snow and ice, with two major cave-ins.
Along the route, Liu said he saw more than 200 workers doing repairs and clearing ice and snow.
Heavy snow that began to fall on New Year’s Day has disrupted road traffic since Jan. 2, cutting off more than 60,000 residents, said Huang Junshan, a traffic police officer in Leigu Township.
To ensure road safety, Huang and his colleagues stopped every passing vehicle, registering the number plates, taking photos and making sure the tire chains were in place.
“We urge drivers with less than three years’ road experience to abandon their trips into the mountains,” said Huang.
The 36-km trip from Leigu Township to Yuli Village, the endpoints of the road, takes three hours.
Leigu and Yuli were among the worst-hit areas in the 8.0-magnitude quake. Thousands of people died. Schools and hospitals were relocated to prefabricated structures, while villagers built huts with boards and felt.
As temperatures fell to the freezing point, most villagers heated their homes with firewood.
“Fortunately we’ve stored some supplies,” said Liu Taiyuan, 72.His little cabin in Yuli Village was kept warm by charcoal. Homemade sausages hung on the wall.
Liu and his wife kept adding fuel to the stove, but the place was still too cold for their 12-year-old grandson, who huddled under his quilt to watch TV.
By the end of last year, Liu said the local government had rationed out rice, cooking oil, quilts, winter clothing, and 140 yuan (20 U.S. dollars) in cash. “The real trouble is transportation,” said Liu. “A trip to Leigu Township costs 150 yuan.”
The traffic logjam hampered the construction of permanent homes, said village official Fu Zhanguo. “A brick that sells for 0.3 yuan in other counties costs three times as much here.”
Next to Liu’s cabin stood his partly-built new home. The concrete structure and roof were in place, but “we’re still waiting for bricks to complete the house,” said Liu.
As of Friday, 16 provinces — more than half of the country — have had snow or sleet. Ice storms have snarled traffic in central, eastern and southern China, posing threats to the coming Spring Festival travel rush, which starts Sunday.
There’s no forecast for snow in arid Beijing, however, in the next 10 days, the municipal meteorological bureau said Friday.

20090106: Xinhua: Quake roads ‘all now reopened’

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Quake roads “all now reopened”
Xinhua 2009-01-06 09:08:07

Standing beside the flowing Minjiang River, Li Linxian made his New Year’s wish: finishing his hardest-ever mission as soon as possible.
As a construction worker with the Sichuan Road & Bridge Group (SRBG), Li and his 44 workmates have been working on the road between Dujiangyan and Wenchuan, the epicenter of the May earthquake, for nearly eight months.
“We have never left the road since the third day after the massive quake destroyed it,” Li said, noting this has been the most challenging mission in his roughly two-decade long career.
Yesterday, construction workers in Sichuan’s quake-hit regions got the best reward, as the provincial government announced that all the roads destroyed by the May earthquake have reopened.
The 12-km-long road that links the village of Zhitai, is located about 15 km north of the epicenter in Wenchuan county, to the No 317 national highway has been reopened, the provincial government said on its website.
That means all the 2,384 affected roads in the province have resumed operation, it said.
According to media reports, the massive quake has affected or destroyed 22,000 km of roads in Sichuan.
The government also said it will continue focusing on road maintenance in the future.
Known as the eastern route, the 82-km road between Dujiangyan and Wenchuan was almost totally destroyed by the quake and subsequent landslides. The 710-km western route via Ya’an, which provided access for rescue and medical teams, suffered less damage.
“The detour is eight times longer than the eastern route,” Li said.
Working alongside the Minjiang River, the team has been constantly hampered by heavy rains and aftershocks, which on May 14 – the first day they got there – “happened almost once a minute”, he said.
More than 3,000 workers from SRBG have led the way in rebuilding the province’s shattered road network after the quake. Thanks to their hard work, the road between Dujiangyan and Wenchuan was clearly and finally reopened in early September.
Since then, Li’s team started the maintenance work.
Currently, they are on their last task in the whole mission: rebuilding an 84-m-long bridge linking a protruded rock and a village in which the team is now based. Without a bridge, vehicles will have to detour by encircling the steep rock in a valley of the Minjiang River.
“We hoped to finish the bridge before the Chinese New Year, but we know it is impossible now,” Li said, blaming the delays on the forbidding terrain.
Their construction site is located in the village of Suopo, about 30 km to the south of Wenchuan County.
“Suopo” means “sliding slope” in the Sichuan dialect, and Li’s team has been at constant risk from falling rocks, aftershocks and landslides, since they got there in mid-September.
Each night before they go to bed, the workers park large machinery just out of their temporary shelter to block the falling rocks.
“Local people call the mountain Guizhaoshou (鬼招手devil’s greeting),” Li said.
“Many times when we woke up, we found machinery that had been broken by fallen rocks.”
There is a risk even when it is deep in winter – not a rainy season, he said, as winds set off rock falls.
But work still goes on, Li added. Following his fingers, workers were busy at the foot of the “devil’s greeting”.
In order to finish the bridge, the whole team works for 24 hours a day and on two shifts.
“Now we hope a new bridge will be here after the Chinese New Year, allowing vehicles passing by to get further away from the devil’s greetings,” Li said.

20090127: Xinhuanet: China’s Sichuan Province to “closely audit” quake rebuilding spending

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-01/27/content_10726131.htm

by Xinhua writer Zhou Yan

CHENGDU, Jan. 27 (Xinhua) — Southwest China’s Sichuan Province said Tuesday it will closely audit the use of post-quake rebuilding funds over the next three to five years and publicly release the results at the end of that period.

The province will carefully scrutinize the raising, distribution and use of funds and supplies, according to a document issued by the general office of the Sichuan provincial government.

“The funds and supplies [audited] will include appropriations by the provincial and local governments, as well as donations,” the notice said.

Central government appropriations will be separately monitored by the Beijing-based National Audit Office. Last year, the central government allocated 70 billion yuan (about 10.1 billion U.S. dollars) for a reconstruction fund for the quake zone.

The document, however, did not mention the controversial purchase of a luxury car in Beichuan, one of the hardest-hit counties.     The mountainous county, where about 20,000 people were dead or missing after the massive earthquake, paid 1.1 million yuan including taxes for a luxury Toyota land cruiser.     The deal, exposed in a blog, triggered public anger and was termed as “corruption” by some critics.     However, Beichuan’s public security Chief Zhang Depu defended the purchase Friday, saying tough transport conditions made high-quality cross-country vehicles necessary in emergencies.     He said the land cruiser would become a wireless communications car for emergency use in rescue and disaster relief work.

The provincial document said that auditors in Sichuan will give special attention to key projects and areas such as the rebuilding of homes, schools, hospitals, welfare homes and other public facilities.     Auditors will also scrutinize quality control systems in the post-quake rebuilding, it said.

The magnitude-8.0 quake that hit southwest China, including many parts of Sichuan, on May 12 killed more than 69,000 people. It also left nearly 18,000 missing, more than 374,000 injured and millions homeless.
The Sichuan provincial government estimated post-quake rebuilding will cost about 1.6 trillion yuan.

Workers from 20 provinces are involved in the reconstruction effort. Those provinces will allocate at least 1 percent of their annual fiscal revenues into the reconstruction projects for three years.

20083112: Photos from the Wenchuan area showing earthquake damage

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

Kieran Fitzgerald was in the Wenchuan area on 31st December 2008.  He took these photos.  The damage which show the power of the earthquake, with massive landslides and broken bridges.

This is one reason why the last SQR delivery trip took 5 days.

Wenchuan area, 31st December 2008

Landslide

Wenchuan area, 31st December 2008

Broken bridge
Wenchuan area, 31st December 2008

Landslide

Wenchuan area, 31st December 2008

Huge chunk of rocky mountain that fell off during the quake.

For more photos, go to http://www.flickr.com/photos/sichuanquakerelief/