End of the line for steam trains
Share - WeChat
As China reduces coal capacity to combat pollution, mines and their locomotives are being shut down
An approaching cacophony of rattles and blasts of steam tore through the silence of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. Noises from another era.
Then it appeared, clattering and shuddering at 30 kilometers per hour-one of China's few surviving steam trains at the Sandaoling coal mine in Hami prefecture, currently the biggest steam locomotive operation in the country.
The coal mine will shut down within two years, and so too will the 11 steam locomotives. The train drivers are counting the days.
Related Stories
- Chinese architect confirms economic feasibility of integrating tradition and modernity
- Xinjiang's Tumxuk harvests rice from desert saline-alkali fields
- Japanese warship admits receiving advance notice by Chinese aircraft carrier
- Chinese doctor carries out eye surgery in C909 aircraft
- China's happiest cities revealed
- Dual food-security forums in Sanya highlight China-Latin America cooperation
































