
China has finished digging the underwater section of a high-speed rail tunnel stretching more than 14km (9 miles) under a busy segment of the Yangtze River, as the country increasingly turns to vast subterranean passages to expand its railway network.
The tunnel beneath China’s longest waterway, which will link Shanghai’s Chongming Island with Taicang city in neighbouring Jiangsu province, is on track to be completed by the end of the year, state broadcaster CCTV reported.
The project will allow trains to hurtle through the tunnel at 350km/h (217mph), enabling faster connections between cities on China’s populous eastern coastline and Hefei, the capital of nearby Anhui province, according to state media reports.
Advertisement
A tunnel boring machine emerged from the Yangtze shoreline on Sunday, after spending nearly two years punching a passageway with a 15-metre (49-foot) diameter under the river, according to People’s Daily. The tunnel is the longest of its kind ever constructed in China, it added.
Advertisement

Don't Miss:
-
US revokes temporary sanctions waiver on Iranian oil after vessels attacked in Hormuz
-
Ten Chapitos Gunmen Killed in Government Operations in Rosario, Sinaloa
-
Colombia’s president-elect suspends transition after outgoing leader Petro’s fraud claims
-
Cardinal in Morocco steps back from duties after sexual assault claims
-
Trump still ‘disappointed’ with Nato, says US should control Greenland as summit kicks off

Taiwanese authorities charge executives who helped China’s cyber spies target ICIJ network
Who Killed Father Diệp — and Who Gets to Decide?
Duterte Impeachment Puts 2028 Race — and Philippine Institutions — on Trial