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A lot on the line

MTR Corp has fixed its sights on getting into the mainland's burgeoning metro railway sector, but its business model may hit the buffers

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MTR Corp's deputy chief executive Lincoln Leong is eyeing metro networks that will more than double in size by 2020. Photo: Felix Wong
Toh Han Shih

Urban railway operator MTR Corp wants to export the successful property-plus-rail model it operates in Hong Kong to the mainland, but faces obstacles in laws relating to the sale of land.

"We want to migrate our rail and property expertise to China," said Lincoln Leong Kwok-kuen, MTR's deputy chief executive.

"We'd like to grow and develop in the cities we operate in [and] we want to explore new cities. China's metro plan creates a lot more opportunities for us to develop in more cities than we have today."

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MTR had made 5.3 billion yuan (HK$6.6 billion) of equity investments on the mainland, Leong said. It operates four metro lines in Beijing, Shenzhen and Hangzhou.

"The integrated rail and property model must be the option to finance metro rail development in China. Passengers alone cannot provide adequate commercial returns," Leong said at the recent Asia Pacific Rail summit.

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In last October last year, then premier Wen Jiabao called for more integration of land use with public transport to enable the sustainable development of the country's metro railways, Leong said.

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