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Holiday travel delays fuel calls in China for bridge to Hainan
- The resort island is reliant on ferries and planes to bring in tourists but demand for transport is growing, especially among motorists
- A bridge was first mooted 50 years ago but there are big engineering problems to overcome, says one official
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A member of China’s top advisory body has thrown his weight behind renewed calls to build a bridge between the southern resort island of Hainan and the mainland after legions of tourists faced delays getting home during the Lunar New Year holiday.
The island was inundated with visitors over the eight-day break, with tourist numbers up by more than 30 per cent on last year, according to official figures.
But transport to and from Hainan is limited to air and sea options.
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Ticket prices for flights from Hainan skyrocketed at the tail end of the break as carriers tried to clear a backlog, according to China Newsweek.
This year, the number of motoring tourists, particularly those with electric vehicles, increased, resulting in long queues at ferry terminals for passages for their cars.
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A Hainan official who refused to be named said places for EVs on ferries were limited under safety guidelines issued by the provincial transport department.
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