The schedule has been set for the first five trains to Tibet via the new 
Qinghai-Tibet railway which will begin trial operations on July 1, an official 
with the Qinghai-Tibet Railway Company said Friday. 
The first five trains will depart from Beijing, Chengdu, capital of southwest 
China's Sichuan Province, Xining, capital of the northwestern Qinghai Province, 
Shanghai and Guangzhou, capitalof the southern Guangdong Province, according to 
Mao Baocheng, deputy general manager of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway Company. 
Trains bound for Tibet will depart daily from Beijing, Chengdu and Xining. 
There will be departures from Shanghai and Guangzhou every other day, Ma added. 
Tickets for the first trains are sold out. 
The 1,956-kilometer-long Qinghai-Tibet railway is the world's highest and 
longest plateau railroad and also the first railway connecting the Tibet 
Autonomous Region with other parts of China. 
Some 960 kilometers of its track are located 4,000 meters abovesea level and 
the highest point is 5,072 meters, at least 200 meters higher than the Peruvian 
railway in the Andes, which was formerly the world's highest altitude railway. 
The railway will have two oxygen-enrichment systems on trains tocombat the 
effects of altitude sickness. 
The oxygen level in the carriages will be about 85 percent of that in 
low-lying plain areas, said Ma, adding that oxygen masks will also be installed 
near seats for passengers in case they are affected by the high altitude. 
Zhang Fuhua, an official with the Qinghai tourism administration, expects an 
additional 800,000 travelers will visit Tibet with the operation of the 
Qinghai-Tibet railway. 
Qinghai is working fast to build its tourism infrastructure so it can better 
cope with the increase in tourists, Zhang said. 
China's Qinghai-Tibet railway will begin trial operation on July 1 this year, 
and it has attracted large numbers of travelers to go sightseeing in Tibet. 
To date, train tickets for the six lines to Tibet, including from Beijing to 
Lhasa, have been booked up by travel agencies, according to railway sources. 
The 1,142-kilometer-long Qinghai-Tibet railway, which runs across the frozen 
tundra of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau from Golmud of Qinghai to Lhasa, is the 
first railway connecting the Tibet Autonomous Region with other parts of China. 
With the trial operation of passenger trains, tourists will find it more 
convenient to travel to Tibet, since the railway is comparatively low-cost and 
safer than other transport means, said Ma Baocheng, deputy general manager of 
the Qinghai-Tibet Railway Company. 
For travelers to have sufficient time to enjoy the natural beauty on the 
plateau, the passenger trains will depart in the morning and arrive in the 
evening. 
Meanwhile, this world's highest and longest plateau railroad will have two 
oxygen supply systems on trains to combat the effects of altitude sickness on 
passengers. 
Oxygen will come from a system like central air-conditioning on trains, which 
can ensure the oxygen content in carriages at about 85 percent of that in plain 
areas, said Ma, adding that oxygen masks will also be installed near seats for 
passengers to use incase they still feel sick. 
About 800,000 more travelers will visit Tibet by way of Qinghai with the 
operation of the Qinghai-Tibet railway, said Zhang Fuhua, an official with the 
Qinghai tourism administration. 
Qinghai is making efforts to speed up the tourism infrastructure construction 
to cope with the increase of tourists, Zhang said.