Explanatory Notes on Main Statistical Indicators
Length of Railways in Operation
refers to the total length of the trunk line under passenger and freight
transportation (including both full operation and temporary operation). The
calculation is based on the actual length of the first line even if this line
has a full or partial double track or more tracks, excluding double tracks,
station sidings, tracks under the charge of stations, branch lines,
special-purpose lines and the non-payable connecting lines. The length of
railways in operation is an important indicator to show the development of the
infrastructure for the railway transport, and also the essential data to
calculate volume of passenger freight transport, traffic density and
utilization efficiency of the locomotives and carriages.
Length of Electrified Railways refers
to the length of the section of railways in operation in which the power supply
lines and other equipment are installed for the running of electrified
locomotives. The proportion of the length of electrified railways to the total
length of railways in operation is an important indicator to show the
modernization of railways.
Automatic-blocking and
Semi-automatic-blocking Length of Railways refer to length of
railways installed with equipment to perform automatic or manual blocking of
trains. Blocking is a spacing technique by which a section of the railway only
allows one train to pass at a time in the aim of ensuring the traffic safety. the proportion of automatic/semi-automatic blocking length
to the total length of railways in operation is an important indicator to show
the modernization of railways.
Length of Highways refers to
the length of highways which are built in conformity with the grades specified
by the highway engineering standard formulated by the Ministry of
Communications, and have been formally checked and accepted by
the departments of highways and put into use. The length of highways includes
that of the suburb highways at large and medium-sized cities, highways passing
through streets at small cities and towns, and also the length of bridges and
ferries. It does not include the length of streets in big and medium-sized
cities and highways built for the production purpose at factories, mines,
forest areas and agricultural areas. If two or more highways go the same
section of the way, the length of the section is only calculated for once and
no duplication is allowed. The length of highways is an important indicator to
show the development of the highway construction and to provide essential
information to calculate the transport network density.
Length of Navigable Inland Waterways it is
an indicator reflecting the size and development of inland water network, it
refers to the length of the natural rivers, lakes, reservoirs, canals, and
ditches open to navigation during a given period, which enables the transport
by ships and rafts. It includes the channels open to navigation for over an
accumulative 3 months in a year, yet this does not include the river courses, which
are only used to float odd logs and bamboo rafts. This indicator can reflect
the scale, level and development situation of the inland waterway network.
Length of Civil Aviation Routes refers to
the length of all routes for regular civil aviation flights. There are usually
two ways to calculate the distance between airports connected by the route
length: One is to put the length of all air routes together, called duplicated
calculation of the length of the routes; the other is not to allow the duplication
in calculation when two or more routes passing the same section of aviation
routes. The latter is usually used, as it can precisely show the size of the
civil aviation network and indicate the extent of civil aviation serving the
national economy and the people.
Length of Oil (Gas) Pipelines used as an indicator to show the
development, scale and level of the pipeline transportation, it refers to the
actual transport distance of oil (or gas) products, and is in general
calculated in the length of single pipeline. If the length of the double
pipelines and alternate pipeline are included, it is called the extension
length of the oil (gas) pipelines, which indicates the actual length of the
pipelines built, excluding double pipelines.
Freight (Passenger) Traffic refers to
the volume of freight (passenger) transported with various means. Freight
transport is calculated in tons and passenger traffic is calculated in the
number of persons. Despite the type of freight and traveling distance, the
freight transport is calculated in the actual weight of the goods: and despite
the traveling distance and ticket price, the passenger traffic is calculated by
the principle that one person can be counted only once in one travel. The
passengers who travel with a half price ticket or a child ticket is also
calculated as one person. The freight (passenger) traffic provides a
quantitative measure to show how the transport industry serves the national
economy and people, and is also an important indicator for planning the transport
industry and for studying the development scale and speed of the transport
industry.
Freight (Passenger) Traffic Density refers to
the freight (passenger) traffic volume carried by a particular means of
transportation during a given period through one kilometer of a specific
section of transportation route. The formula is as follows:
Freight (Passenger) traffic density=[freight ton-kilometers (passenger-kilometers)] / (length
of route in operation)
Freight (passenger) traffic density reflects
the degree of business of freight (passenger) traffic on transportation routes,
and therefore provides important information for balancing transport
capability, planning construction and upgrading of transport routes and
studying the distribution of transport network.
Freight Ton-kilometers
(Passenger-kilometers) refer to the sum of the products of the
volume of transported cargo (passengers) multiplying by the transport distance.
It is an important indicator to reflect the achievement of transportation
industry. Normally, the shortest distance between the departure station and the
destination station (i.e., the payable distance) is the basis to calculate the
freight ton-kilometers. This is an important indicator to show the total
results of the transport industry, to prepare and examine the transport plan
and to measure the efficiency, the labour
productivity and the unit cost of transport.
The formula is as follows:
Freight ton-kilometers
(passenger-kilometers) =∑{freight (passenger)
traffic x distance of transportation}
Static Load of Freight Cars refers to the
average cargo weight as loaded by each freight car under the static condition
at the departure station. It is used to show the utilization extent of the
loading capacity of the freight cars. The formula is:
Static load (ton) of freight car=(tonnage of goods dispatched) / (number of freight cars
loaded)
The static load of freight cars is
determined by the nature and type of goods loaded, the
type of vehicles, and the technique of loading. The difference between the
average marked load and the static load of freight cars reflects the
utilization of loading capacity of freight cars. For its calculation the
following formula is applied:
Utilization rate of capacity of freight cars(%)=[(Average static load) / (Average marked load)]×100%
Average Daily Haul of Freight Locomotives refers
to the average total ton-kilometers accomplished by each freight transport
locomotive over day and night during a given period of time. It includes both
the weight of the goods carried and the dead weight of the train itself. It is
a comprehensive indicator reflecting the locomotive efficiency in terms of both
time and the pulling force.
Average daily haul of freight transport
locomotive (ton-kilometer)=(Total ton/kilometers of
freight) / (Daily number of freight transport locomotive)
Volume of Freight Handled in Major Coastal
Ports refers to the volume of cargo passing in and out the harbor
area of the major coastal ports and having been loaded and unloaded. The volume
includes that of the postal matters, registered luggage and fuels, materials
and fresh water as supplies of the ships. The volume of freight handled may be
classified by direction of flow as freight for import and freight for export,
or by nature of cargo as freight for domestic trade and freight for foreign
trade. As an important indicator, the volume of freight handled by type of
cargo and by main flow direction reflects the production capacity of ports.
Possession of Civil Motor Vehicles: refer to
the total numbers of vehicles that are registered and received vehicles license
tags according to the Work Standard for Motor Vehicles Registration
formulated by transport management office under department of public security
at the end of reference period. They are divided into following categories
according to the structure of motor vehicles: passenger vehicles, trucks and
others; and private vehicles and vehicles for units use according to
ownerships; working vehicles, non-working vehicles and special motor vehicles
according to kind of usage; large passenger vehicles, medium passenger
vehicles, small passenger vehicles and mini passenger vehicle, heavy trucks,
light-heavy trucks , light trucks and mini trucks according to sizes of
vehicles.
Business Volume of Post and
Telecommunications refers to the total amount of post and
telecommunication services, expressed in value terms, provided by the post and
telecommunications departments for the society. Post and telecommunication
services can be classified as letters, parcels, remittance, issue of newspapers
and magazines, fast mail service, express mail service, savings deposits,
stamps for collection, public and individual telegraph service, facsimiles,
long-distance telephone service, leasing of telephone lines, urban paging
service, mobile telephone service, data transfer and transmission, etc. The
accounting approach is to multiply the service products of all types with their
average unit price (constant price) to get sum of business value, plus income
from other services such as leasing of telephone lines and equipment,
maintenance of telephone switchboards and lines on behalf of customers. This
indicator reflects the overall results of post and telecommunications service during
a given period, and is important to study the composition of business service
and the development of post and telecommunications service.
The formula is as follows:
Business volume of post and
telecommunications=∑(Transaction of post and
telecommunication service x constant price) + Income from leasing, maintenance
and other services
Subscribers of Wireless Paging Services Wireless
paging service refers the service by which telephone users send audio, digital
or character signals to persons carrying small-size pagers within the
designated areas through wireless paging centers. The page carriers who have
registered in paging centers are counted as paging subscribers.
Mobile Telephone Subscribers refer to
the persons who own mobile telephone numbers and are connected with the mobile
telephone communication network through the mobile telephone switchboards,
including contracted subscribers and pre-paid subscribers for intelligent
network. One mobile telephone is taken as a subscriber.
Internet Users refer to the number
of Chinese citizens who use Internet at least for one hour each week.
Local Telephone Subscribers refer to
subscribers that are connected to the local telecommunication service provider
through fix line network, including household subscribers, institutional
subscribers and public telephones. They are also classified as city subscribers
and rural subscribers according to locations. Before 1997, city subscribers
referred to those connected to city telephone networks in county towns and cities,
while village subscribers referred to those connected to village telephone
stations at and below counties. Since 1997, the classification of telephone
subscribers was modified on the basis of physical location of the subscribers
as urban telephone subscribers and rural telephone subscribers, which is
different from the previous classification of categorizing local telephones and
rural telephones, while the definition of total subscribers and total number of
telephones remain unchanged.
Urban Telephone Subscribers refer to
number of telephone subscribers, located at municipalities, cities under the
jurisdiction of province, cities at prefecture level, downtown and suburb of
city at county level town and county towns (including country towns where
county government located, and towns of county level according to the
administrative organizational system), that are connected to the public line
telephone network, including rural mineral area, forest area, military area.
Rural Telephone Subscribers refer to
telephone subscribers, located at counties (towns) and villages outside the
range of cities according to administrative jurisdiction.
Household Telephone Subscribers refer to
telephone sets installed in the dwelling units of urban or rural residents, and
registered as residence subscribers for payment, including 3 types of payment
for the service: private payment, public payment and free service.
Capacity of Long Distance Telephone
Exchanges: refers to the rated capacity of telephone exchanges to
connect long distance telephone network, including capacity of international
telephone exchanges.
Capacity of Office Telephone Exchanges refers
to the capacity (measured in gate) of telephone exchanges installed in the
offices of telecommunication service providers for communication between fixed
telephones. It includes the capacity of both manual and automatic exchanges in
use and for stand-by purpose, excluding the capacity of subscribers
exchanges.
Capacity of Mobile Telephone Exchanges: refers to the capacity
of the maximum services provided to subscribers at one time basing on a certain
model and transacting capacity of the mobile telephone exchanges.