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Letters | Would breaking MTR’s monopoly really benefit Hong Kong?

  • Readers discuss calls for competition in Hong Kong’s rail market, and official efforts to rejuvenate the city’s nightlife

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An MTR train at Kowloon Bay on June 21, 2022.       Photo: Dickson Lee
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I would like to respond to “MTR Corp faces competition for link to Qianhai” (September 4).

The second-stage study on the Hong Kong-Shenzhen Western Rail Link is still under way. It is prudent at this time, therefore, for the government to canvass options for financing, construction and operation of the link.

However, while the link might be viewed as strategically necessary to facilitate the development of renminbi financial services, it is difficult to see how passenger numbers are generated thereby.

Mr Henry Cheung Nin-sang, chairman of the Association of Hong Kong Railway Transport Professionals, according to your report, estimates a construction cost of “about HK$20 billion for the Hong Kong leg as the government would prefer to adopt a light rail system”, thereby implying that a heavy rail system would be more expensive. For a 10km route length with one station (for certain), including a contribution to the purchase and stabling of rolling stock, even that sum seems expensive.

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We are told that the Hong Kong government may invite bids for the opportunity to construct and/or operate the link.

How a “light rail system” sits with the Shenzhen authorities is not remarked upon. Would a light rail system be suitable for the proposed future extension from Hung Shui Kiu to Hong Kong Island via the Kau Yi Chau artificial islands? How are boundary crossing facilities to be implemented and paid for?

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