BEIJING: In Zhengzhou, Central China’s Henan province, an advanced tunnelling boring machine (TBM) rolled off a production line last week, ready to be deployed for the construction of an underwater branch of Beijing Subway Line 1.
The device, with an innovative stone handling system, can realise continuous tunnelling, precise screening and mechanical transport of boulders, offering a breakthrough solution for shield construction in challenging cobble strata.
Independently designed and produced by China Railway Engineering Equipment Group Co Ltd (CREG), the country’s largest TBM manufacturer, this machine underscores the rapid development of China’s advanced manufacturing sector.
As early as 1825, beneath the River Thames, French engineer Marc Isambard Brunel had constructed the world’s first tunnel to use a shield tunnelling method.
This pioneering technology was subsequently refined and widely adopted across Europe.
However, more than a hundred years later, when the first phase of the Beijing Subway Project (later renamed Line 1) started construction in 1965, China’s tunnel boring industry was still in its early stages.
With a weak industrial base and no core technologies, construction relied heavily on manual excavation, an inefficient and high-risk approach.
“We had only read about the subway in books. None of us had ever seen it,” said Wang Xinjie, the then designer at the underground railway survey and design office in Beijing.
In recent years, fuelLed by scientific and technological innovation, Chinese tunneLling technology and equipment have progressed rapidly, transforming the country from a follower to a front-runner in the global TBM industry.
Notably, the production and sales volume of CREG have ranked first in the world for the past eight consecutive years.
Its shield machines have excavated over 5,000 km of tunnels in total, supporting infrastructure construction in metro, railway, highway, mining, water conservancy and municipal work, among others.
“China’s vast territory and diverse geology have served as a natural testing ground, allowing TBM manufacturers to accumulate experience, develop technologies and enhance equipment adaptability,” said Wang Weibo, an official with CREG.
The remarkable transformation of China’s TBM industry underlines the country’s strong determination to boost manufacturing.
According to a pivotal document outlining priorities for the country’s next five-year plan, China should consolidate and enhance the position and competitiveness of its industries such as mining, machinery and construction in terms of the global industrial division of labour.
It should also ensure its industrial chains become more self-supporting and risk-resilient, advance industrial foundation reengineering and research on major technologies and equipment, and develop advanced manufacturing clusters.
So far, China has produced over 4,000 TBMs, accounting for about 70% of the global market share.
With high quality and customised services, Chinese-made machines are attracting an increasing number of foreign clients.
CREG has exported its shield products to more than 30 countries and regions in the world, including Denmark, France, Italy, Canada, Brazil, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and the United Arab Emirates.
Whether in the freezing areas of Northern Europe or the scorching deserts of the Middle East, the Chinese company has provided timely and professional technical support and after-sales services.
At a CREG factory in Zhengzhou, Hacia, a TBM decorated with green aboriginal paintings, was last week undergoing its final tests.
Named by second-grade students from Glen Waverly Primary School, it will mark the fifth shield machine CREG has supplied to Australia. — Xinhua
