Holiday toll-free policies
China's
municipalities and most of its provinces have rolled out their own
versions of the toll-free plan required by the Ministry of Transport for
the upcoming eight-day holiday.
By Wednesday, China's
four municipalities - Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin and Chongqing - as well
as a number of provinces, such as Guangdong, Zhejiang, Shandong, Hunan
and Sichuan, had outlined their toll policies, which will take effect
for the first time.
Most of the provinces
said highways and bridges will allow free passage by small passenger
cars during the longer-than-usual holiday, which includes the Mid-Autumn
Festival and National Day.
Airport expressways
will allow free passage, except in Hubei province, which has ruled that
the highway connecting Wuhan's downtown and the airport will continue to
collect tolls.
In some regions,
regulations are more favorable than the terms set by the transport
ministry. In Chongqing, for example, passenger cars and dual-purpose
vehicles, such as pickup trucks with seven seats or fewer, will not have
to pay tolls.
East China's Jiangxi
province has made more flexible regulations. It ruled that cars could
still go free if they get stuck in traffic jams on highways on the last
night of the holiday when the policy is due to expire.
Only the Tibet autonomous region and Jilin and Hainan provinces have not released their detailed rules yet.
The transport ministry
estimated last week that an average of 80.9 million passengers will use
the roads every day during the National Day holidays this year, up 8.9
percent compared with last year.
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