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China and Russia Planning $230bn Moscow-Beijing High Speed Rail Link
By Sean Martin at International Business Times
The respective governments of China and Russia are seriously considering the idea of building a high-speed railway line between their two capital cities, according to reports.
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The Beijing Times said that the line, which would be over 7,000 kilometres but cutting the Trans-Siberian railway
journey from six days to two, would cost in excess of $230bn (£142.9bn,
€179.5bn) if it is to connect Moscow and Beijing via a high-speed railway line.
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If it were to be completed, it would be triple the length of the world's longest high-speed line which runs from Beijing to Guangzhou.
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Wang Meng-shu, a tunnel and railway
expert at the Chinese Academy of Engineering, told the Beijing Times:
"If the funds are raised smoothly... the line can be completed in five
years at the quickest."
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Vladmir Putin and Premier Li Keqiang signed a memorandum of understanding
when China's head of government travelled to Moscow earlier in the
week, with the duo outlining their interested in building a high-speed
link between Moscow and Kazan in the Tatarstan region, an area which holds vast amount of oil, China Central Television (CCTV) reported.
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It was reported earlier in the year that China was considering building a 13,000km high-speed railway line that would run from Beijing to east coast US.
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The
line, creatively dubbed the China-Russia-Canada-America line, would
begin in Beijing, travel north through Siberia, and under the Bering Strait to Alaska before heading south through Canada to reach its final - unspecified - destination in the United States.