Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/china

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Chunyun

Period of travel in China with extremely high traffic load around the Chinese New Year


Period of travel in China with extremely high traffic load around the Chinese New Year

Chunyun (; literally translated as “Spring transportation”), also referred to as the Spring Festival travel rush or the Chunyun period, is a period of travel in China with extremely high traffic load around the time of the Chinese New Year. The travel season in China usually begins 15 days before New Year's Day and lasts for around 40 days. In 2016 it was predicted that there would be 2.9 billion passenger journeys during that year's Chunyun season.{{Cite news | access-date=2016-02-09 It has been called the largest annual human migration in the world. Rail transport experiences the biggest challenge during the period, and several problems have emerged. This phenomenon is also seen in parts of Asia such as Japan, Vietnam and South Korea.

Origin

Three main factors are responsible for the heightened traffic load during the Chunyun season.

First, reuniting with their families during Chinese New Year is a long-held tradition for most Chinese people. People return home from work or study to have reunion dinner with their families on New Year's Eve. Since the Chinese economic reforms of the late 1970s, new economic opportunities have emerged, often at a considerable distance from people's hometowns. Places such as the Special Economic Zones and the wealthy coastal regions offer employment and often, a more sought-after lifestyle. Consequently, there has been a massive migration from rural to urban areas over the course of the last few decades, reminiscent of the Industrial Revolution around the world. The number of these migrant workers was estimated at 50 million at 1990 and unofficially estimated at 150 million to 200 million in 2000. During the Chunyun season, many of these laborers return to their home towns.

Second, Chinese education reforms have increased the number of university students, who often study outside of their hometown. The Spring Festival holiday period falls around the same time frame as their winter break. Among the 194 million railway passengers of the 2006 Chunyun period were 6.95 million university students.

Finally, because the Spring Festival Period is one of only two week-long holiday periods in the People's Republic of China (the other being National Day, Oct 1), many people choose to travel for pleasure around this time. Tourism in mainland China reaches at this time of year record levels, further adding to the pressure on the transportation system.

These factors exacerbate current problems with China's current inter-city transportation systems. The railway network is insufficient to handle the number of passengers, and does not reach enough places. The locations not serviced by rail must rely on buses for transportation, which faces problems such as inadequate equipment and road network.

Taiwan

In Taiwan, spring travel is also a major event.

The majority of transportation before the Lunar New Year in western Taiwan is southbound long-distance travel, in which people travel from the urbanized north to their hometowns in the rural south. Transportation in eastern Taiwan and between Taiwan and outlying islands is somewhat less convenient. Cross-strait flights between Taiwan and mainland China began in 2003 as part of Three Links, mostly for "Taiwanese businessmen" to return to Taiwan for the New Year. After the New Year, there are many local family tours throughout the holidays. On the second and the third day, there is a second wave of medium-long-distance travel when the families go to the hometowns of the wives. Near the end of the holidays there is a wave of northbound returning travels which is less concentrated than the southbound travels. In 2012, on the second day of the Lunar New Year, there were an estimated 3 million cars on the island's freeways, and on the 8th day (the Friday of the holiday week) there were "2.7 million vehicles, about 1.7 times the average daily traffic volume of about 1.6 million."{{cite news

Vietnam

Main article: Tết

The Vietnamese New Year or Tết is the main traveling season for millions of Vietnamese with both migrant workers and urbanites seeking to về quê, meaning returning to hometown, to reunite with their families. Large number of people also go on holidays during this period. Numerous travel agencies warn against traveling in Vietnam during the season of Tet due to large number of Vietnamese traveling home makes finding space on buses or planes very difficult. In 2019, air travel demand increased by 12 percent to 12 million passengers for the New Year festival.

References

Bibliography

  • M.W.H., Railroad in the clouds, Trains March 2002
  • Chinese internet film director Hu Ge has made a parody film about the phenomenon.

References

  1. Serenitie Wang, Karla Cripps. (22 January 2019). "World's largest annual human migration now underway in China".
  2. (7 January 2009). "BBC NEWS - World - Asia-Pacific - China's holiday rush begins early".
  3. Gittings, John. (2000-12-20). "Population not Taiwan 'is China's challenge'". The Guardian.
  4. (2005-01-04). "Students prove a large market force".
  5. (July 2020). "Natural gas news, analysis and intelligence - Natural Gas Daily".
  6. "Xinhua - English".
  7. "Railway ticket prices to be increased during Spring Festival".
  8. Joe Weisenthal, 2012-09-30, [http://www.businessinsider.com/golden-week-huge-traffic-james-in-china-2012-9 It's 'Golden Week' In China, And The Traffic Jams Are Like Nothing You've Ever Seen], Business Insider
  9. Zoe Li, 2012-10-08, [https://archive.today/20130119212524/http://www.cnngo.com/explorations/life/182000-visitors-and-other-china-golden-week-records-419951?hpt=hp_c4 34 million visitors and other China Golden Week records], CNN Go
  10. 刘明. "Married police officers on patrol to ensure safe trips during chunyun".
  11. (2013-11-30). "Thieves on Overtime; End of Year Crime Increase".
  12. Cody, Edward. (2006-01-21). "A China-Size Travel Delay". The Washington Post.
  13. "Spring Festival severe transport test".
  14. (2008-01-27). "Snow hampers China New Year plans". BBC News.
  15. (2018-03-01). "Large-scale nationwide ridesharing system: A case study of Chunyun". International Journal of Transportation Science and Technology.
  16. (2012-01-02). "Real-name ticket sales for all trains". China Daily.
  17. (August 2017)
  18. (Dec 14, 2019). "Vietnam braces for Tet air travel upsurge". VnExpress.net.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Chunyun — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report