Railway traffic peaks Sunday as Spring Festival holiday ends

Shenyang train station on Feb. 10th., Liaoning Province, China. [Photo: VCG]

Railway traffic peaked Sunday with millions of Chinese returning to work as the week-long Spring Festival holiday ends.

Sunday is expected to see 12.52 million railway trips, up 3.3 percent, and the traffic peak since the Chinese New Year travel rush began about two weeks ago, according to the China Railway Corporation.

Nanjing train station on Feb. 10th., Jiangsu Province, China. [Photo: VCG]

About 11.11 million railway trips were made Saturday, up 4 percent year on year.

Hangzhou train station on Feb. 10th., Zhejiang Province, China. [Photo: VCG]

Rain and snowy weather hit many regions in China during the weekend, partly shifting traffic of other means of transport to the railway.

Aerial view of vehicles waiting to be on board to cross the sea at Xinhai port on Feb. 10th. in Haikou, Hainan Province, China. [Photo: VCG]

Hundreds of millions of Chinese go back to their hometowns to celebrate the Chinese New Year, creating an annual travel rush around the festival that often puts the transport system to the test.

Aerial view of vhicles waiting to be on board to cross the sea at Xinhai port on Feb. 10th. in Haikou, Hainan Province, China. [Photo: VCG]

This year’s Spring Festival travel rush started from Jan. 21 and will last till March 1, with railway trips expected to hit 413 million in total, up 8.3 percent.

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