The city will only allow 2.4 lakh new car registrations in 2011 -- two-thirds less than last year -- by lottery
The city will only allow 2.4 lakh new car registrations in 2011u00a0-- two-thirds less than last yearu00a0-- by lottery
For thousands of hopeful commuters in China's capital, 2011 started with a click, not a bang. Residents hoping to snap up Beijing car licence plate numbers under a new quota system aimed at easing paralysing traffic logged onto a website that launched in the first moments of the new year. Within 10 minutes, 6,000 people had applied for new plate numbers, the Beijing Daily newspaper reported.
Jam packed: A global survey conducted last year by IBM said Beijing
is tied with Mexico City for the world's worst commute. file pic
By 5 pm, more than 53,000 applications had been submitted online, the official Xinhua News Agency said. The applicants are competing for the first batch of 20,000 plates, which are to be awarded by lottery on January 25. Every month a new batch of plates will become available.
The new system aims to reduce the number of cars in the notoriously gridlocked capital. The city will only allow 240,000 new car registrations in 2011u00a0-- two-thirds less than last yearu00a0-- and is parceling them out through the monthly online lottery.
The city now has 4.76 million vehicles, up from 2.6 million in 2005. Worst commute A global survey conducted last year by IBM said Beijing is tied with Mexico City for the world's worst commute.
Worries are growing that Beijing is choking itself for future growth as it gets more difficult to move people and goods around the city.
Nearly 70 percent of Beijing drivers told the IBM survey they had run into traffic so bad they've turned around and gone home.
4.76 million Number of cars in Beijing, up from 2.6 million in 2005
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