China sees rise in railway trips ahead of Spring Festival
BEIJING -- China saw a 27.3-percent year-on-year increase in railway passenger trips made during the 15 days ahead of this year's Spring Festival, which falls on Sunday, according to the national railway operator.
From Jan 7 to Jan 21, 109.5 million trips were made by train, 23.5 million more than last year's pre-festival period, data from China State Railway Group Co Ltd shows.
In the past two years, most Chinese people stayed put during the festival amid virus curbs, but the country's shift in COVID-19 response has brought a change.
The total number of passenger trips for this year's 40-day Spring Festival travel rush, which began on Jan 7, is expected to reach 2.1 billion, almost twice as much as last year or 70.3 percent of the 2019 reading, according to the Ministry of Transport.
The growing travel demand is a result of China's recent downgrading of COVID-19 management from Class A to Class B. Under Class B management, travelers no longer need to present health codes and negative nucleic acid test results or undergo temperature checks when entering railway stations and airports.
- Typhoon Maysak makes landfall in Hainan, triggers closures
- Xizang holds preliminary exam for doctoral degree equivalent in Tibetan Buddhism
- China set to unveil 12 new occupations as emerging industries fuel job creation
- China renews yellow alert for Typhoon Maysak
- Hainan upgrades typhoon alert as Maysak set to be China's first landing typhoon of 2026
- Ultra-large bulk carrier sets Tianjin Port draft record































