Tickets for China's new high-speed trains went on sale on Saturday as the
first bullet trains will hit the track next Wednesday, said a spokesman for the
Ministry of Railways here Saturday in Beijing.
 Brand new homemade high-speed trains
CRH are seen at a railway station in Jinan, east China's Shandong
Province, April 12, 2007. The CRH trains which could run at least 200km
per hour, will serve on high speed routes between major cities after the
sixth nationwide railway speedup from April 18. [Xinhua]
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On April 18, 280 bullet
trains, which can travel at speeds of up to 250 kilometers per hour, will be put
into operation between the country's major cities. A total of 514 such trains
will be in use by the end of this year.
The base price for the tickets is slightly higher than ordinary trains,
according to the spokesman.
At a press conference Thursday, Vice Minister of Railways Hu Yadong said
raising the speed limit will help boost passenger and cargo capacity on the
nation's 77,000-km railway lines by 18 percent and 12 percent, respectively.
Travel time between major cities will be slashed by up to 50 percent.
Currently, express trains in China travel at an average of 115 kilometers per
hour.