Skip to main content

Shanghai Keolis JV to manage tram network

Ridership estimated to reach 50,000 passengers a day in eastern Chinese city of Jiaxing
By Ben Spencer December 9, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Shanghai Keolis JV will operate tram network of two lines spanning 15.6km (image credit: Shenjia)

Shanghai Keolis has entered a joint venture (JV) to operate a tram network in the Chinese city of Jiaxing.

It is expected to serve 4.65 million people in the city, which lies in the eastern coastal province of Zhejiang.

Shanghai Keolis is working with Jiaxing Tram in the Shenjia JV over the next five years to create an integrated rail transport option in the Yangtze River Delta, one of China’s three great metropolitan regions.

Bernard Tabary, CEO international at Keolis, says: “Our goal is to provide an outstanding mobility option to Jiaxing residents and visitors and to reduce traffic congestion and pollution by offering a safe, reliable alternative to private cars.”

The network will have two lines spanning 15.6 km and 26 stations, including Jiaxing regional train station and Jiaxing South for high-speed rail.

A total of 20 trams made by CRRC will run on it, with daily ridership estimated to reach 50,000 passengers.

A third line will be added in 2023, bringing the network to 35.7 km of line, 55 stations and 45 trams.

The service is scheduled to open from 1 July 2021. 

Part of the deal includes the recruitment of 200 new employees, including drivers, maintenance technicians and customer support staff.

Shanghai Keolis will train new employees based on its experience of operating the Songjiang tram network, a section of which the firm opened last August, bringing its total coverage up to 27km.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Ability to keep in touch on US buses woos travellers
    February 1, 2012
    David Crawford finds evidence of a new trend in American intercity travel: that better access to data sources on the move is tempting passengers away from air travel and onto surface modes. In the US the ease of use of Portable Electronic Devices (PEDs) is successfully wooing long-distance travellers away from airlines and onto surface public transport, according to just-published research. Using data from field observations of 7,028 passengers travelling by bus, air and train in 14 US states and the Distri
  • Bright shiny green future: Asecap Sustainability Forum
    August 30, 2023
    Knowing your company’s carbon footprint is one thing, but the real issue is understanding and reporting to investors Scope 3 emissions. David Arminas reports from the 2nd Asecap Sustainability Forum in Vienna, Austria
  • Peru lines up road, rail concessions for 2015
    November 20, 2014
    Peru plans to award next year infrastructure concessions including rail and road projects. Hydro and thermal power plants and liquefied petroleum gas distribution in the capital are also being lined up, a senior government official has said. Concessions will include the fourth stretch of the Longitudinal de la Sierra highway, which calls for the construction, operation and maintenance of a 640 kilometre stretch of Peru's Longitudinal de la Sierra highway, connecting Huancayo, Izcuchaca, Mayoc and Ayacuch
  • Croix-Rousse demonstrates art of tunnel safety
    December 6, 2018
    How do you expand a tunnel when it has reached its traffic limit? Build another tunnel in parallel to it. That, at least, is what Lyon did and opened the 1.7km Croix-Rousse dual-tunnel system in 2013. The smaller, new €283 million tunnel has become a symbol of Lyon’s intention to reinvent itself as one of France’s most innovative mobility centres, said Mathieu Hermen, head of operations at La Metropole de Lyon. Construction of the original two-lane tunnel under one of the city’s most densely populated arro