Beijing's Traffic Madness Set to Worsen

Back in July we reported that Beijing had scored the world’s highest rating on the “Commuter Pain Index,” with traffic five times worse than Los Angeles. That followed a Chinese Academy of Sciences report in June that found Beijing had the longest commute times in China. Now comes this news, reported yesterday in the People’s Daily: “Average driving speeds in the Chinese capital will likely drop below 15 km per hour in five years if the number of vehicles continues increasing while no further measures are taken.”

The article claimed Beijing’s car fleet grew by a staggering average of 1,900 cars a day in the first half of 2010, which means the capital will have around 7 million cars by 2015 if the current growth rate continues. According to the Wall Street Journal, the city’s roads have a maximum capacity of 6.7 million vehicles.

In what may be a sign of things to come for Beijing, a traffic jam along National Expressway 110 (G110) between Beijing and Inner Mongolia entered its eleventh day yesterday according to The Guardian. Jonathan Watts reported:

“The Chinese authorities are struggling to clear the congestion, now entering its eleventh day and which, at its peak, stretched for more than 60 miles (100km). But the drivers still joining it are not optimistic about reaching their destinations swiftly.

‘I have not moved for five hours,’ said Zhang Xingping, 27, standing outside his cab near a road traffic sign mockingly warning him to obey the 100km per hour speed limit.”

Xinhua reported earlier this week that the congestion has been caused by a combination of increased coal truck traffic and road works to repair damage caused by the heavy vehicles.

Trucks have reportedly been caught in the jam for days at a time, allowing villagers along the route to make a handsome profit selling overpriced instant noodles and bottles of water to the hapless drivers.

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Bicycles.

You can do it, China.

The massive Inner Mongolian-Beijing traffic jam is gone, according to this NBC news report

http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/08/25/4965830-chinas-monster-traffic-jam-gone-for-now

Jerry Chan, Digital Marketing & Content Strategy Director

I agree. Maybe they should tax people who buy cars in Beijing without Beijing hukou too.

There needs to be a minimum standard for cars allowed on the road.

All these cheap QQ, Geely and other crappy Chinese cars that you can buy for 30,000 rmb should be scrapped.

Minimum cost for a car should be 100-150,000 rmb, that would keep the peasants off the roads and therefore greatly reduce the number of vehicles causing these congestions.

If less people can afford to buy cars, then more of them will use public transit.

Irish coffee, and Irish car bomb
A fat drunk jew starts singing this song
I take a closer look and the fat guy is me
So I buy him a shot, and he buys me back three

lesser reported is the story about the two guys who are at the head of this 11-day traffic jam, where their vehicles are still stopped in the middle of the road where they touched bumpers. They're going into their 11th day of constantly trying to one-up each other with threats about how much guanxi they have.

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They're probably building another road next to it as we speak. Which will be gridlocked in 12 months.

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I'm sick of hearing about this jam. It would be a nice change to hear about what the government is going to do about it to prevent this from happening again. This is simply ridiculous in a country like China where, despite its challenges, it does have a relatively sophisticated roadway system.