Spring Festival: 100,000 requests in 15 hours but no train ticket
SOCIAL
By Yao Nian

2016-12-30 20:55 GMT+8

The year 2017 is going to be the hardest Spring Festival journey home, as the number of trips during the holidays is projected to reach nearly three billion. With the passenger number reaching an all-time high, getting hold of a rail ticket is proving to be harder than ever.
Spring Festival Travel in Beijing in 2016 /CFP Photo
A reporter from National Business Daily tried to buy a bullet train ticket from Guangzhou, south China's Guangdong Province, to Changsha, central China's Hunan Province, from the railway operator's official website, 12306.cn, and official app for four straight days between Dec 24 and Dec 28, only to find all his efforts go in vain.
The country's rail operator began issuing tickets 30 days before the New Year's Eve of Spring Festival, a time traditionally for family reunion, which falls on Jan 27.
On Dec 28, the reporter decided to pay 50 yuan ($7.2) more per ticket to try a software that reportedly increases the chances of securing a rail ticket by 69.5 percent. The software tried to bump his name up on the list, but gave up even though the reporter sent 100,000 request in 15 hours.
Spring Festival Travel in  Beijng in 2015 /CFP Photo
According to the official Weibo account of China Railway Corporation on Dec 26, Changsha ranks third on the list of top 10 destinations across China, only second to Wuhan and Xi'an.
Official data show 12.343 million train tickets were sold on Dec 26, with 9.3 million purchased online, or 75.4 percent of all tickets bought.
"A total of 3,570 pairs of trains will operate after the new schedule comes into effect on Jan 5," said Yang Yudong, deputy transport minister and head of National Railway Administration, adding that the passenger capacity will increase more than 7 percent compared to the same time last year.
Spring Festival Travel in Beijing in 2014 /CFP Photo
During the 2016 national holiday, railways across China undertook 14.41 million trips, setting a new record for railway passenger capacity and far surpassing any daily passenger capacity of previous Spring Festivals.
"As we were able to handle more than 14 million trips during national holiday, we can also reach that capacity during this Spring Festival," Yang said.
Though the passenger capacity has improved more than ever, the pressure on transport system this year is higher than previous years, said Lian Weiliang, deputy head of National Development and Reform Commission.
The high-speed train is starting off in Beijing on January 23, 2014. /CFP Photo
National passenger flow volume is expected to create new high, Lian said. He estimates that 2.52 billion people will take road trips, up 1 percent from last year, while railways will have 356 million trips, up 9.7 percent from the last year, air planes will make 58.3 million trips, up 10 percent from the last year, and waterways will take 43.5 million trips, up 2 percent from the last year.
"The Spring Festival this year has come earlier in recent five years. Students and migrant workers head home in the same time period. Therefore, the travel peak comes earlier, lasts longer and peaks higher," said Lian.
(Source: China Daily)

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