HomeNewsIndiaChina set to build Xinjiang–Tibet rail line cutting through Aksai Chin near LAC: Why it matters for India

China set to build Xinjiang–Tibet rail line cutting through Aksai Chin near LAC: Why it matters for India

The planned line will link the existing Lhasa–Shigatse section to a new Hotan–Shigatse route, creating a roughly 2,000 km (1,240-mile) strategic corridor between China’s northwest and southwest

August 11, 2025 / 16:17 IST
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China, China news, China latest news, Tibet, Tibet news, Xinjiang, Xinjiang Tibet railway line, Line of Actual control, Ladakh, Chin railways
File photo of China-Tibet rail line passing by the Kunlun mountains in China's far northwestern Qinghai province. (AFP)

Amid growing concerns over construction of a mega dam on Brahmaputra, there’s another infrastructure project that may pose a geostrategic worry for India. Latest media reports from Beijing suggest that the Xi Jinping administration has decided to commence the work on the critical Xinjian-Tibet railway link that will run close to the Line of Actual Control near Ladakh. The railway link, which will cut through Aksai Chin will connect Hotan in Xinjiang to Tibet’s Capital city Lhasa.

Government-run South China Morning Post says that the Xinjiang–Tibet Railway Company was officially registered with a capital of 95 billion yuan (US $13.2 billion) at the Shanghai Securities News last week. Fully owned by China State Railway Group, the company’s remit includes activities such as real estate development, tourism, catering, accommodation, and international contracting projects.

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The planned line will link the existing Lhasa–Shigatse section to a new Hotan–Shigatse route, creating a roughly 2,000 km (1,240-mile) strategic corridor between China’s northwest and southwest. It is one of four planned railways connecting Tibet to other provinces; the others will link the region with Qinghai, Sichuan, and Yunnan. The Qinghai–Tibet line is already operational, while work on the other two continues.

Research by Hubei-based Huayuan Securities notes that the project is part of a broader vision to establish a 5,000 km high-altitude rail network centred on Lhasa by 2035. The registered capital covers only the initial funding; for comparison, the 1,800 km Sichuan–Tibet Railway had an estimated cost of 320 billion yuan.