53,000 Apply On The First Day Of Beijing's Car Rationing

Bertel Schmitt
by Bertel Schmitt

So. Yesterday, Jan 1, was the first day of the grand car rationing in Beijing, China. From now on out, only 20,000 new vehicles per month are allowed onto Beijing’s roads. (If you trade old for new, this rule doesn’t apply.) And what did Beijingers do? Take a taxi? The subway? No, they swamped the system.

A grand total of 53,549 people applied for a new Beijing license plate as of 5pm yesterday, the Beijing News reports. That’s more than double the number allotted for a whole month. Citizens can apply on-line. On the 26th of each month, there will be a big lucky draw, and if you win, you may buy a car. First in line stands the same chances as the applicant that entered on the 25th – which makes the run on the databank even more curious.

The 20,000 per month / 240,000 per year quota is not cast in stone. “Beijing will revise its car quota on a year-by-year basis, depending on road capacity and air quality,” transportation authorities told Global Times.

Those without a Beijing plate “are required from Jan. 1 to apply for a permit before entering the capital,” says Bloomberg.

That alone is fascinating. If taken literally, it would bring all traffic in China’s northern quadrant to its knees. If you inspect Google maps, you will see that Beijing’s city limits (dotted line) are drawn rather wide, and, not unusual for a capital, it is a traffic hub. Up there, most roads lead through Beijing.

When the new car regime was announced last month, a record 30,000 new vehicles were registered in Beijing in the week of December 13, Bloomberg says. The city now officially has 4.76 million cars. A city development, plan unveiled in 2004, had projected 5 million cars on Beijing’s roads by 2020. No wonder the following went viral in Beijing’s expat scene:

“Did you hear they will rename Beijing AGAIN?”

“No. What’s will it be called this time?”

“Honking.”

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  • PeteMoran PeteMoran on Jan 02, 2011

    This is hilarious. We had some of our Beijing colleagues in the office before Christmas and they were talking about what's going on (at least locally) re car ownership. They said the allure is rapidly disappearing. Car horror stories are frequently in the news and papers. Take a densely populated city (country??) with excellent public transport, add cars and get; buyer's remorse.

  • Bertel Schmitt Bertel Schmitt on Jan 02, 2011

    Well, Beijing is Beijing, and Shanghai is Shanghai - but that's only 40 million out of probably 1.5 billion. It's a big country. In a way, similar to the U.S.A., except that it has only one coast. The car allure is strong. if you only have a bicycle or a moped. Only 63 cars per thousand, not 800 as in the U,S. The transformation is happening at breakneck speed, way faster than Japan or Korea. Sure, a snooty Beijinger who four years ago would have killed for a car now has second thoughts - elsewhere this took ages. The garage space in my building now costs $120 a month that's a third of the wages of a secretary. But outside of the megacities, motorization has just begun. I have lived long enough to have heard predictions for just about every large city to drown in cars. All the cities are still alive. These are transitory problems. They will get a grip on it. And knowing the Chinese, they will get a grip faster than anyone else. Just look at their high speed trains.

  • ToolGuy CXXVIII comments?!?
  • ToolGuy I did truck things with my truck this past week, twenty-odd miles from home (farther than usual). Recall that the interior bed space of my (modified) truck is 98" x 74". On the ride home yesterday the bed carried a 20 foot extension ladder (10 feet long, flagged 14 inches past the rear bumper), two other ladders, a smallish air compressor, a largish shop vac, three large bins, some materials, some scrap, and a slew of tool cases/bags. It was pretty full, is what I'm saying.The range of the Cybertruck would have been just fine. Nothing I carried had any substantial weight to it, in truck terms. The frunk would have been extremely useful (lock the tool cases there, out of the way of the Bed Stuff, away from prying eyes and grasping fingers -- you say I can charge my cordless tools there? bonus). Stainless steel plus no paint is a plus.Apparently the Cybertruck bed will be 78" long (but over 96" with the tailgate folded down) and 60-65" wide. And then Tesla promises "100 cubic feet of exterior, lockable storage — including the under-bed, frunk and sail pillars." Underbed storage requires the bed to be clear of other stuff, but bottom line everything would have fit, especially when we consider the second row of seats (tools and some materials out of the weather).Some days I was hauling mostly air on one leg of the trip. There were several store runs involved, some for 8-foot stock. One day I bummed a ride in a Roush Mustang. Three separate times other drivers tried to run into my truck (stainless steel panels, yes please). The fuel savings would be large enough for me to notice and to care.TL;DR: This truck would work for me, as a truck. Sample size = 1.
  • Art Vandelay Dodge should bring this back. They could sell it as the classic classic classic model
  • Surferjoe Still have a 2013 RDX, naturally aspirated V6, just can't get behind a 4 banger turbo.Also gloriously absent, ESS, lane departure warnings, etc.
  • ToolGuy Is it a genuine Top Hand? Oh, I forgot, I don't care. 🙂
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