http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-world/japan-launches-hayabusa-bullet-train-20110305-1bik0.html

Japan launches 'Hayabusa' bullet train 
Hiroshi Hiyama 
March 5, 2011 - 2:49PM 
Japan's latest bullet train, the thin-nosed "Hayabusa" or Falcon, made its 300 
kilometre per hour (186 mph) debut, boasting a luxury carriage modelled on 
airline business class.

Japan has built up a network of cutting-edge Shinkansen train lines since the 
1960s that criss-cross the island nation and now hopes to sell the 
infrastructure technology abroad, including to the United States.

The latest ultra-fast tech-marvel will make two trips a day from Tokyo to 
Aomori, a scenic rural backwater on the northern tip of the main Honshu island 
that has until now been off Japan's bullet train map. It will also make one 
more trip a day to Sendai, located between Tokyo and Aomori.

Mutsutake Otsuka, chairman of East Japan Railway Co. (JR East), stressed the 
engineering sophistication of the new ride.

"To the best of our ability, we will strive to improve Hayabusa's passenger 
comfort, safety and environmental friendliness, not just its speed," he told 
hundreds of people who came to Tokyo station to see the futuristic train.

The mood at the launch was dampened slightly by a seven minute delay to the 
first service after a passenger fell from the platform at Tokyo station, where 
more than 1,000 train hobbyists rushed to take pictures.

The train was not moving at the time, and the man climbed back up to the 
platform unaided.

The green-and-silver E5 series Hayabusa travels at up to 300 kilometres per 
hour to make the 675 kilometre trip to Aomori in three hours and 10 minutes. 
From next year, it will push its top speed to 320 kilometres per hour to become 
Japan's fastest train.

Passengers will glide quietly along the straight stretches and tunnels that cut 
through Japan's mountainous countryside, said JR East, which has heavily 
promoted the launch of the new service.

Those willing to pay 26,360 yen ($320) for a one-way trip can enjoy the comfort 
of a 'GranClass' car, where a cabin attendant will serve them drinks and food 
in their deeply reclining leather seats on thick woollen carpets.

To promote the service, the train company has also heavily advertised Aomori as 
a tourist destination, praising its landscape, seafood and winter snow.

Japan's ultra-fast, frequent and punctual bullet trains have made them the 
preferred choice for many travellers, rather than flying or road travel, ever 
since the first Shinkansen was launched in time for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.

But as Japan, and its railway companies, struggle with a fast-greying and 
shrinking population and falling domestic demand, the government and industry 
are aggressively seeking to promote the bullet trains abroad.

Japan has in the past sold Shinkansen technology to Taiwan and hopes to capture 
other overseas markets, such as Brazil and Vietnam, but faces stiff competition 
from train manufacturers in China, France and Germany.

The biggest prize is a future high-speed US rail network that President Barack 
Obama has promoted, to be backed by 13 billion US dollars in public funding.

California's then-governor Arnold Schwarzenegger was treated to an early test 
ride on the Hayabusa when he visited Japan in September.

Japan says its trains boast a strong safety record: despite running in an 
earthquake-prone country, no passenger has ever died due to a Shinkansen 
derailment or collision -- although people have committed suicide by jumping in 
front of the trains.

Japan has also been developing a magnetic levitation or maglev train that, its 
operator says, reached a world record speed of 581 kilometres per hour in 2003 
on a test track near Mount Fuji in Tsuru, west of Tokyo.

The plan is to launch maglev services between Tokyo and the central city of 
Nagoya by 2027. By 2045 they are expected to link Tokyo with the main western 
city of Osaka in just one hour and seven minutes, compared with the current two 
hours 25.

© 2011 AFP
This story is sourced direct from an overseas news agency as an additional 
service to readers. Spelling follows North American usage, along with foreign 
currency and measurement units. 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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