|
Telephones-Main lines in
use
|
313.68
million (2009)
|
|
Telephones
- mobile cellular
|
747
million (2009)
|
|
Telephone system
|
General
assessment: domestic and international services are increasingly
available for private
use; unevenly
distributed domestic
system serves
principal cities,
industrial centers,
and many towns; China
continues to develop
its telecommunications
infrastructure, and is
partnering with
foreign providers to
expand its global
reach; China in the
summer of 2008 began a
major restructuring of
its telecommunications
industry, resulting in
the consolidation of
its six telecom
service operators to
three, China Telecom,
China Mobile and China
Unicom, each providing
both fixed-line and
mobile services
Domestic: interprovincial
fiber-optic trunk
lines and cellular
telephone systems have
been installed;
mobile-cellular
subscribership is
increasing rapidly;
the number of Internet
users exceeded 250
million by summer
2008; a domestic
satellite system with
55 earth stations is
in place
International: country
code - 86; a number of
submarine cables
provide connectivity
to Asia, the Middle
East, Europe, and the
US; satellite earth
stations - 7 (5
Intelsat - 4 Pacific
Ocean and 1 Indian
Ocean; 1 Intersputnik
- Indian Ocean region;
and 1 Inmarsat -
Pacific and Indian
Ocean regions) (2008)
|
|
Broadcast Media
|
All
broadcast media are
owned by, or
affiliated with, the
Communist Party of
China or a government
agency; no
privately-owned
television or radio
stations with
state-run Chinese
Central TV,
provincial, and
municipal stations
offering more than
2,000 channels; the
Central Propaganda
Department lists
subjects that are off
limits to domestic
broadcast media with
the government
maintaining authority
to approve all
programming;
foreign-made TV
programs must be
approved prior to
broadcast (2008)
|
|
Internet Country Code
|
.cn
|
|
Internet Hosts
|
15.251
million (2010)
|
|
Internet Users
|
389
million (2009)
|
|
Transportation
|
|
|
Airports
|
502
(2010)
|
|
Airports-with paved
runways
|
Total: 442
Over 3,047 m: 63
2,438 to 3,047 m: 137
1,524 to 2,437 m: 132
914 to 1,523 m: 27
Under 914 m: 83
(2010)
|
|
Airports-with unpaved
runways
|
Total: 60
Over 3,047 m: 4
2,438 to 3,047 m: 7
1,524 to 2,437 m: 9
914 to 1,523 m: 13
Under 914 m: 27
(2010)
|
|
Railways
|
Total: 86,000
km
Country comparison to
the world: 3
Standard gauge: 86,000
km 1.435-m gauge
(36,000 km
electrified) (2009)
|
|
Roadways
|
Total: 3,860,800
km
Country comparison to
the world: 2
Paved: 3,056,300
km (includes 65,000 km
of expressways)
Unpaved: 804,500
km (2009)
|
|
Waterways
|
110,000
km (navigable
waterways) (2010)
|
|
Pipelines
|
Gas
38,566 km; oil 23,470
km; refined products
13,706 km (2010)
|
|
Ports and harbors
|
Dalian,
Guangzhou, Ningbo,
Qingdao, Qinhuangdao,
Shanghai, Shenzhen,
Tianjin
|
|
Merchant Marine
|
Total: 2,010
By type: barge
carrier 6, bulk
carrier 571, cargo
639, carrier 5,
chemical tanker 98,
container 204,
liquefied gas 55,
passenger 9,
passenger/cargo 83,
petroleum tanker 271,
refrigerated cargo 35,
roll on/roll off 9,
specialized tanker 1,
vehicle carrier 24
Foreign-owned: 18
(Germany 1, Hong Kong
15, Japan 2)
Registered in other
countries: 1,623 (Bahamas 4, Bangladesh 1, Belize 64, Bermuda
13, Cambodia 203,
Comoros 1, Cyprus 6,
France 5, Georgia 11,
Germany 2, Honduras 2,
Hong Kong 432, India
1, Indonesia 1,
Kiribati 28, Liberia
10, Malta 11, Marshall
Islands 16, North
Korea 1, Norway 25,
Panama 574,
Philippines 4, Saint
Kitts and Nevis 1,
Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines 82, Sierra
Leone 12, Singapore
26, South Korea 9,
Thailand 1, Togo 2,
Tuvalu 9, UK 7,
unknown 59) (2010)
|
|
Disputes-International
|
Continuing
talks and
confidence-building
measures work toward
reducing tensions over
Kashmir that
nonetheless remains
militarized with
portions under the de
facto administration
of China (Aksai Chin),
India (Jammu and
Kashmir), and Pakistan
(Azad Kashmir and
Northern Areas); India
does not recognize
Pakistan's ceding
historic Kashmir lands
to China in 1964;
China and India
continue their
security and foreign
policy dialogue
started in 2005
related to the dispute
over most of their
rugged, militarized
boundary, regional
nuclear proliferation,
and other matters;
China claims most of
India's Arunachal
Pradesh to the base of
the Himalayas; lacking
any treaty describing
the boundary, Bhutan
and China continue
negotiations to
establish a common
boundary alignment to
resolve territorial
disputes arising from
substantial
cartographic
discrepancies, the
largest of which lie
in Bhutan's northwest
and along the Chumbi
salient; Bhutan
protests Chinese road
construction and other
activities on
Bhutanese soil;
Chinese border
soldiers frequently
intrude deep into
Bhutanese territory;
Burmese forces
attempting to dig in
to the largely
autonomous Shan State
to rout local militias
tied to the drug
trade, prompts local
residents to
periodically flee into
neighboring Yunnan
Province in China;
Chinese maps show an
international boundary
symbol off the coasts
of the littoral states
of the South China
Seas, where China has
interrupted Vietnamese
hydrocarbon
exploration; China
asserts sovereignty
over Scarborough Reef
along with the
Philippines and
Taiwan, and over the
Spratly Islands
together with
Malaysia, the
Philippines, Taiwan,
Vietnam, and Brunei;
the 2002
"Declaration on
the Conduct of Parties
in the South China
Sea" eased
tensions in the
Spratly's but is not
the legally binding
"code of
conduct" sought
by some parties;
Vietnam and China
continue to expand
construction of
facilities in the
Spratly's and in March
2005, the national oil
companies of China,
the Philippines, and
Vietnam signed a joint
accord on marine
seismic activities in
the Spratly Islands;
China occupies some of
the Paracel Islands
also claimed by
Vietnam and Taiwan;
China and Taiwan
continue to reject
both Japan's claims to
the uninhabited
islands of
Senkaku-shoto (Diaoyu
Tai) and Japan's
unilaterally declared
equidistance line in
the East China Sea,
the site of intensive
hydrocarbon
exploration and
exploitation; certain
islands in the Yalu
and Tumen rivers are
in dispute with North
Korea; North Korea and
China seek to stem
illegal migration to
China by North
Koreans, fleeing
privations and
oppression, by
building a fence along
portions of the border
and imprisoning North
Koreans deported by
China; China and
Russia have demarcated
the once disputed
islands at the Amur
and Ussuri confluence
and in the Argun River
in accordance with
their 2004 Agreement;
China and Tajikistan
have begun demarcating
the revised boundary
agreed to in the
delimitation of 2002;
the decade-long
demarcation of the
China-Vietnam land
boundary was completed
in 2009; citing
environmental,
cultural, and social
concerns, China has
reconsidered
construction of 13
dams on the Salween
River, but
energy-starved Burma,
with backing from
Thailand, remains
intent on building
five hydro-electric
dams downstream
despite regional and
international
protests; Chinese and
Hong Kong authorities
met in March 2008 to
resolve ownership and
use of lands recovered
in Shenzhen River
channelization,
including 96-hectare
Lok Ma Chau Loop; Hong
Kong developing plans
to reduce 2,000 out of
2,800 hectares of its
restricted Closed Area
by 2010
|
|
International organization
participation
|
Has
not submitted an ICJ
jurisdiction
declaration; non-party
state to the ICCT
|
|