CHINA'S ROAD NETWORK

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T01098A000200070001-7
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RIPPUB
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S
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20
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December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 26, 2001
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1
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Publication Date: 
January 1, 1974
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A00020007000190cret China's Road Network Secret ER RP 74-1 January 1974 Copy No. Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 68 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 WARNING This document contains information affect inq the national defense of the United States, within the n caning of Title 18, sections 793 and 794, of the US Cod as amended. Its transmission or revelation of its con tents to or re- cl?ipt by an unauthorized person is prof ibited by law. Classified by 015319 Exempt from general declassilicalion schedle of E.O. 1165: e:emprion category 19i11,(a?,~~I Auromaricaily doclossaied on Dais lmpostible ru Delarm.ne Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA7R098A000200070001-7 CHINA'S ROAD NETWORK SUMMARY 1. China's road network, roughly comparable with the US network of the early 1920s, consists of interconnected systems of locally and regionally oriented roads. The network was approximately 700,000 kilometers (km) in length at the end of 1972, compared with only 75,000 km in 1949. Despite this manyfold expansion, roads continue to provide mainly short-haul, farm-to-market transport service. Except in Tibet and other sparsely populated areas of western China, roads do not play a role in long-haul transport; they merely supplement the long-haul transport services of the principal interprovincial carriers -- the railroads and navigable waterways. Direct through routes linking widely separated parts of the country are few in number, and there is no coordinated national highway system. Almost all of the roads in the network are surfaced with either dirt or gravel. Most of the roads, while adequate for their limited traffic, require constant maintenance because of their poor quality. The Primary Network 2. The primary network of roads in China, depicted on the map inside the back cover, consists of principal connections between larger population centers. Roads in this network vary widely in quality, depending on the function and location of the roads -- for example, whether there are nearby rail lines or waterways. Amounting to less than one-fourth of China's road mileage, the roads in the primary network generally are two-lane, gravel or asphalt surfaced, and motorable throughout the year. The roads in this network are divided into three categories: a. Two-lane, all-weather roads with an oil/asphalt surface, drainage, and bridges or ferries. b. Two-lane, all-weather roads with a prepared surface of gravel/crushed rock, drainage, and bridges or ferries. Note: Comments and queries regarding this publication are welcomed. They may be directed to of the Office of Economic Research, Code 143, Extension 7884. Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : Cl? f fft~T,Q,1098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/12(gp,-BgP79T01098A000200070001-7 C. Probable two-lane, fair-weather roads - tl ese roads usually have a prepared surface, may have drainage, and have fords at most streams. Most of the roads in the primary network fall under the latter two categories. 3. The remainder of China's road net%?ork, or more than three-fourths of the total mileage in the eountly, consists of simple farm-to-market connections, surfaced with dirt or travel. These roads are passable by trucks in good weather and. by carts anti other types of native transport in most weather. 4. Only 11,; to Y'( of the entire road neNork has been surfaced with asphalt, concrete, or residual oil. The largest concentrations of bituminous- or oil-treated roads are located on the North China Plain, the western edge of the Szechwan Basin near Ch'en[-tu, the southern and western edges of the Dzungarian Basin, and in othe - scattered areas where roads accommodate relatively high levels of traffic )r experience excessive erosion. A few major arteries in the larger cities are paved with concrete. Expansion of the Network 5. Most of the roads in the 75,000-km network inherited by the C olllmunists in 1949 were narrow, poorly constri.cted. unsurfaced, and furnished only with ferries or low-capacity brid;;es. After successfully repairing war damage and restoring the existing network to operation, the new government began an extensive expansion program in 1953 that ended in 1960, in this period, more than 350,000 km of roads were built. Additional roads were built at varying rates of co istruction through the 1960s and early 1970s. Construction is currently progressing at an estimated rate of 30,000 km of new roads per year. 6. Since 1949 the Chinese have increased he total length of the network about eight times, as indicated in the following tabulation: End of Year Length of Nt twork (Thousand Kil""meters) 1949 751 1950 100 1952 127 1957 255 1958 400 1959 480 1961 490 Approved For Release 2001/04/1(?I ~_l_ 9T01 098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10: CIAFATL01j098A000200070001-7 End of Year Length of Network (Thousand Kilometers) 1965 550 1970 640 1971 670 1972 700 1. At the time of the Communist takeover in October 1949. The massive construction effort has greatly improved the quality of the roads and related structures and has provided motorable links to most populated areas in China. The growth and development of the economy - China's gross national product has grown at an average rate of about 4% since 1953 -- has generated the need for an expanding road network to accommodate China's rapidly increasing number of trucks. Truck production has risen from 7,500 units in 1957 to 100,000 units in 1972, and hundreds of heavy-duty trucks (capacity of more than 8 metric tons) have been imported from Japan and Western Europe. At the current rate of construction, the total length of the national network should approach 800,000 km by the end of the present five-year plan in 1975. Regional Distribution of the Network 7. The geographic distribution of the Chinese road network has changed markedly during the past 20 years. In 1949 the road network was distributed primarily around the population centers of the eastern coastal provinces. A small number of roads in other areas of China, such as the Lan-chou - Sinkiang road in the west and the Burma road in the southwest, completed this sparse network. Detailed data on the growth of the road network (see Appendix A) indicate that in absolute terms the largest increases have taken place in provinces located in Central, South, and Southwest China, where Peking has emphasized economic expansion during the last two decades. Up to the mid-1960s, considerable expansion also took place in Sinkiang, probably as much for strategic as for economic reasons. The smallest increases have occurred in the sparsely populated provinces of Tsinghai, Inner Mongolia, and Tibet and in various provinces of East China where railroads and the Yangtze River provide superior alternative means of transportation. Data on the distribution of the road network (see Appendix B) indicate that the proportion of the network located in Central, South, and Southwest China is substantially greater than in 1949, whereas the proportion located in the North and Northeast is less than in 1949. Approved For Release 2001/04/10: CIA ff7M " 98A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/1f I 9T01 098A000200070001-7 8. Appendix B also compares the regional c istribution of the road network with the regional distribution of pops lation and area. This comparison indicates that the distribution of the network approximates the distribution of population only in the Northeast, South, and Southwest. Substantial differences exist in the other regions. Far example, East China has only about one-tenth of the network but has more than one-quarter of the population: and Northwest China has more tl-an 15`/0 of the network but less than 7`7 of the population. 9. 'rile density of the road network varies c )nsiderably in different parts of the country. The overall density for the country as a whole is about 7 km to 8 kni of road per 100 square kil+,meters of area. In the Northeast. Last, Central, and South Regions the c ensity is about double the countrywide average. In two provinces, Chekia ig and Kwangtung, the density is almost triple the national average. In the North. Northwest, and Southwest. however, the density is equal to or less than the overall figure. Approved For Release 2001/04/10 C RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA9R@%.b98A000200070001-7 CHINA: GROWTH OF THE ROAD NETWORK Length of Network (Kilometers) Present Density I Kil 10 Region and Province 1949 Presentl ncrease (Kilometers) ( ometers per 0 Square Kilometers) Northeast Liaoning 8,000 30,000 (73) 22,000 13.0 Kirin N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. Heilungkiang N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. North Hopeh 5,0002 13,000 (58) 8,000 6.5 Shansi N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. Inner Mongolia 1,875 15,943 (72) 14,068 3.7 East Shantung N.A. 25,500 (70) N.A. 16.6 Kiangsu 2,800 12,100 (71) 9,300 11.8 Chekiang 1,900 20,900 (72) 19,000 20.5 Anhwei 1,142 15,000 (71) 13,858 10.7 Central Honan 2,226 25,000 (73) 22,774 14.9 Kiangsi 3,200 19,000 (65) 15,800 11.5 Hopeh 2,261 26,200 (72) 23,939 13.9 Hunan 1,305 32,824 (72) 31,519 15.5 South Fukien 1,800 20,000 (73) 18,200 16.2 Kwangtung 2,523 42,900 (72) 40,377 20.2 Kwangsi 3,000 30,600 (73) 27,600 12.7 Northwest Shensi N.A. 22,000 (73) N.A. 11.2 Kansu N.A. 15,000 (57) N.A. 1 9 Ningsia Tsinghai N.A. 472 N.A. 14,000 (72) N.A. 13,528 . 1.9 Sinkiang 3,600 25,600 (64) 22,000 1.5 Southwest Szechwan 4,500 50,000 (72) 45,500 8.7 Yunnan 2,700 40,000 (73) 37,300 9.1 Kweichow 1,900 23,000 (71) 21,100 13.2 Tibet N.A. 16,500 (73) N.A. 1.3 1. The latest year for which information is available is indicated in parenthesis. 2. Length of the network in 1950. Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIAASV~F ,MeP098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10: CI57P'f9g09098A000200070001-7 APPENDIX B CHINA: DISTRIBUTION OF THE ROAD NETWORK, POPULATION, AND AREA Length of Network Region and Province 1949 Presents Population2 Area Northeast N.A. N.A. 10.0 12.6 Liaoning 10.6 4.1 (73) 4.6 2.4 Kirin N.A. N.A. 2.3 2.8 Heilungkiang N.A. N.A. 3.1 7.4 North N.A. N.A. 10.9 8.2 Hopeh 5.0 3.2 (58) 7.5 2.2 Shansi N.A. N.A. 2.5 1.6 Inner Mongolia 2.5 2.3 (72) 0.9 4.4 East N.A. 10.9 25.1 5.4 Shantung N.A. 4.0(70) 8.4 1.6 Kiangsu 3.7 1.7(71) 7.9 1.2 Chekiang 2.5 3.0(72) 3.8 1.1 Anhwei 1.5 2.2(71) 5.0 1.5 Central 11.8 15.2 20.0 7.7 Honan 2.9 3.4(73) 7.2 1.8 Kiangsi 4.2 3.4(65) 2.8 1.7 Hupeh 3.0 3.7 (72) 4.7 2.0 Hunan 1.7 4.7 (72) 5.3 2.2 South 9.7 13.0 11.0 6.0 Fukien 2.4 2.7 (73) 2.3 1.3 Kwangtung 3.3 6.1 (72) 5.5 2.2 Kwangsi 4.0 4.2(73) 3.2 2.5 Northwest N.A. N.A. 6.7 34.9 Shensi N.A. 3.0 (73) 3.0 2.0 Kansu N.A. 5.9(57) 2 3 8.2 Ningsia Tsinghai N.A. 0.6 N.A. 2.0 (72) . 0.4 7.5 Sinkiang 4.8 4.8(64) 1.0 17.2 Southwest N.A. 18.3 16.5 25.2 Szechwan 6.0 7.1 (72) 10.8 6.0 Yunnan 3.6 5.5 (73) 2.8 4.6 Kweichow 2.5 3.4 (71) 2.7 1.8 Tibet N.A. 2.3 (73) 0.2 12.8 1. The latest year for which information is available is indicated in parenthesis. 2. Based on mid-1973 estimates. Approved For Release 2001/04/10: CIAA RIEf08A000200070001-7 MOkGO v " 2001 /04//14 D 9 10 8A 02000700 M ladesh u Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 Peoples Republic of China Primary Road Network December 1973 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 Secret Secret Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 Appt6V@d r-or meleatill 200 110 A6=13001 000 1-7 CONTROL RECORD FOR SUPPLEMENTAL DISTRIBUTIOmTATINTL DISSEM: 29 Jan 74 SERIES NUMBER ER RP 74-1 CLASSIFICATION OF REPORT SECRET DISTRIBUTION TO RC 41 DATE OF DOCUMENT January 1974 NUMBER OF COPIES 186 NUMBER IN RC RECIPIENT DATE NO.- (S) SENT- - RETURNED 1, 2 DDI 16 Jan 74 3 DCI/NIO II 4 DCI/NIO/ CH it 5 D/OER. 6 'Abb/OER 7 via O/ D/OER STATINTL 8,- SA/ER &'D/SA/ER 9 Ch/D/C 10 C/ CH (now in S/IT 15 Jan 74 11 St '/P STATINTL 16 Jan 74 12-16 C -CH 24Jan74 17 STATSPEC 29 Jan 74 18 D OP.R 19 D/IRS 20 Ch/ DCD 21, 22 OTR/II 23 STATSPEC 24 D/CRS 25 CRS/ISG/SAIO 26 D/OBGI 27 D/OCI 28 D/OSR " 29,30 STATINTL II 31 _ Filed in St P/ C II 32 ACh/D/I II 33 ADCh/D/I 34 Ch/D/D " 35 Ch/D/S " 36 C/RE II 37 C IN II 38 Ch/D/U " 3 D h D U " St/SD II 41 St /Cs II 43 _ II 44 STATINTL I I 45 " 46 II 47 STATINTL I I 1 48 4 t 31 Jan 74 FOR 2353 pp"' Analyst: U/ Uti _.._ ._ , roject 6747) ' 0: CIA-RDP7911MU98AW Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 COPY RECIPIENT DATE NO. IS) SENT RETURNED 50-52 via OCI STATINTL ~.1 7y 53,54 via SA/ER STATINTL 55,56 via SANER 57, 58 via OCI STATINTL 59, 60 is SA ER rr - 61 62 -76 Filed in St/P/C 31 Jan 74 77 29 Jan 74STATS EC 78 D' IAS 79 D/NPIC " 80-83 DIA DI-4B1 STATI TL 84-93 IAS/ESD STATI TL 94,95 OBGI STATI TL 96 OCI China Task Force It 97, 98 F. William Hawley III, CIEP it 99, 100 John Yeo, Treasury ti 101-186 Rec'd in St/P/C 8 Feb 74 101-145 DCD/ID/CCS 4 Mar 74 146 Archives 147-186 R cords Center rr S? INTL a STAT TA NTL INTL aS- I TL yST Tt TL "2 _ 1/9 7. p >ZATI NTL .. AprrovedFor Release 2001/04/10 CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 RECORD OF REVIEW OF OER PUBLICATIONS FOR SECURITY/SANITIZATION APPROVAL SUBJECT o2/. 7 , SECURITY REVIEW ITIZING IN RUCTIONS ITEM DATE INITIALS R VE UNEDITED DRAFT 25X1A EDITED DRAFT DELETE 25X1 C SUBSTITUTE 25X1D 25X1A REMARKS ? ,,i1.G / 1A 117 a 911, FIJI SECRET n GROU 1 Excluded from automatic downgrading and declassification ~oor Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIPRU098A000200070001-7 CHINA'S ROAD NETWORK SUMMARY 1. China's road network, roughly comparable with the US network of the early 1920s, consists of interconnected systems of locally and regionally oriented roads. The network was approximately 700,000 kilometers (km) in length at the end of 1972, compared with only 75,000 km in 1949. Despite this manyfold expansion, roads continue to provide mainly short-haul, farm-to-market transport service. Except in Tibet and other sparsely populated areas of western China, roads do not play a role in long-haul transport; they merely supplement the long-haul transport services of the principal interprovincial carriers - the railroads and navigable waterways. Direct through routes linking widely separated parts of the country are few in number, and there is no coordinated national highway system. Almost all of the roads in the network are surfaced with either dirt or gravel. Most of the roads, while adequate for their limited traffic, require constant maintenance because of their poor quality. The Primary Network 2. The primary network of roads in China, depicted on the map inside the back cover, consists of principal connections between larger population centers. Roads in this network vary widely in quality, depending on the function and location of the roads - for example, whether there are nearby rail lines or waterways. Amounting to less than one-fourth of China's road mileage, the roads in the primary network generally are two-lane, gravel or asphalt surfaced, and motorable throughout the year. The roads in this network are divided into three categories: a. Two-lane, all-weather roads with an oil/asphalt surface, drainage, and bridges or ferries. b. Two-lane, all-weather roads with a prepared surface of gravel/crushed rock, drainage, and bridges or ferries. Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-BMTRf98A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001 /04/ refy4 &P79T01098A000200070001-7 C. Probable two-lane, fair-weather roads - ti ese roads usually have a prepared surface, may have drainag!, and have fords at most streams. Most of the roads in the primary network fall .under the latter two categories. 3. The remainder of China's road neR ork, or more than three-fourths of the total mileage in the countr r, consists of simple farm-to-market connections, surfaced with dirt or gavel. These roads are passable by trucks in good weather and by carts and other types of native transport in most weather. 4. Only 1% to 2% of the entire road netwuurk has been surfaced with asphalt, concrete, or residual oil. The largest concentrations of bituminous- or oil-treated roads are located on the North China Plain, the western edge of the Szechwan Basin near Ch'eng-tu, the southern and western edges of the Dzungarian Basin, and in other scattered areas where roads accommodate relatively high levels of traffic o- experience excessive erosion. A few major arteries in the larger cities are paved with concrete. Expansion of the Network 5. Most of the roads in the 75,000-km netk'ork inherited by the Communists in 1949 were narrow, poorly construe ted, unsurfaced, and furnished only with ferries or low-capacity bridges. After successfully repairing war damage and restoring the existing nets+ork to operation, the new government began an extensive expansion progra n in 1953 that ended in 1960; in this period, more than 350,000 km 3f roads were built. Additional roads were built at varying rates of con truction through the 1960s and early 1970s. Construction is currently proguessing at an estimated rate of 30,000 km of new roads per year. 6. Since 1949 the Chinese have increased th! total length of the network about eight times, as indicated in the foll swing tabulation: End of Year Length of Neiti -ork (Thousand Kilon eters) 1949 751 1950 100 1952 127 1957 255 1958 400 1959 480 1961 490 Approved For Release 2001/048P79T01098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79T01098A000200070001-7 1-5 MEMORANDUM FOR: CRS/ADD Release Release of ER RP 74-1, China's Road Network, January 1974, Secret, to Foreign Governments 1. It is requested that the attached copy of subject report be forwarded as follows: #61 2. All OER responsibilities as defined in the DDI memorandum of 13 August 1952, "Procedures for Dissemination of Finished Intelligence to Foreign Governments, " as applicable to this report have been fulfilled. Chief, St/P/ C/,ER this rnernorondun1 has been comptetedy t' y; GyY7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79T01098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 BEST COPY Available Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098AO002000700 s; ^d r i ;a on r ~s a= r_ I in a eachP; w ;?st will con u I`le. I ;0' S ..?, 0 pars Cr .V:Jn. I and 11 oV ihis Form, Pl:.a3e ; p' or prim 1._ res ions h: cliroct-dio ,Doan :0 40, x9-15'17 I`,red~t or X651 1 (J' j7 ) I PIJD'U' AiION TITLE ,AAND CONTCEN 25X1 A XL 7 77 SUwV_t P..i1~\XXXX.X-XX~r , ,1X \ X s T.rSrA rllarlr\.Il \slaLshl~1 >~i t1 x y >'0~x r~/\. RECORD OFFICE (9-10) q 5J; VcY NO. TYPE 41 OCI~ 03 OSR 03 SRS (1-61 I (7-8) X X 02 Oe2 04 OBGI = CRS 48~Fl,iSAC JOINT OFFICE (specify): (- -- l TOPICAL CATtEGOR GEOGRAPHIC AREA CAS? GGIRY Domestic Politics USSR ln;ernational Relations Eastern Europe X2 Economics XXI Communist China I Military Other For East Science & Technology Near East SSoWh Asia Biography Africa Latin America, Western Europe ?.(ST 5^cCI ;C CO NTR1E5: { Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098AO00200070001-7 1 ,,+ i% f\i\ \~ ~!ti,_'1!\1a.731~i1~i~i: J1i'AI\ra/\i\/\~f\~3,"17l ~NMf'+.tr?\r~,r C:13 P!jiUOZ~J!OM DATE i ; 3.13? 25X1 B Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7 Approved For Release 2001/04/10 : CIA-RDP79TO1098A000200070001-7