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Search Result for “government source”

Showing 71 - 79 of 79

NEWS

Officials plan against shutdown

News, Post Reporters, Published on 13/01/2014

» Several ministers have prepared contingency plans for their work to counter the People's Democratic Reform Committee (PDRC)'s city shutdown attempt.

NEWS

Phumtham sorts it for Pongsapat

News, Published on 02/02/2013

» Phumtham Vejjayachai juggles multiple roles in the ruling Pheu Thai Party and is now the back-seat driver of the party's Bangkok governor campaign.

NEWS

Abhisit admits Dems in for tough fight

News, Supoj Wancharoen, Published on 26/01/2013

» Democrat leader Abhisit Vejjajiva has admitted his party's candidate in the upcoming Bangkok governor election, Sukhumbhand Paribatra, is in a tight race with Pheu Thai's Pongsapat Pongcharoen.

NEWS

Lifeline set up for Pongsapat

News, Published on 19/01/2013

» The leadership vacuum in the Office of the Narcotics Control Board (ONCB) is giving way to a flurry of speculation as to who will be caretaker secretary-general of a very dynamic agency.

NEWS

Sita a winner in governor election

News, Published on 12/01/2013

» Although Khunying Sudarat Keyuraphan is certain not to accept nomination from the Pheu Thai Party to run in the next Bangkok governor election, her future is not altogether uncertain.

NEWS

Sukhumbhand lands with thud

News, Published on 05/01/2013

» The Democrat Party's announcement that Bangkok governor MR Sukhumbhand Paribatra will seek a second term in office has landed with a thud.

NEWS

Pattaya to have hi-speed trains

Published on 06/09/2012

» The Thai government will open bidding for the first phase of a hi-speed rail project linking Bangkok to Pattaya.  Under the plan, the first four routes will cover 250 kilometers linking Bangkok to Phitsanulok, Nakhon Ratchasima and Hua Hin as well as to Pattaya.  Construction on all the four routes will begin at the same time with the aim of opening the new track network in 2018. Government approval will be necessary for the international bidding process expected to be completed next year.  China, Japan, South Korea and France have all expressed strong interest in bidding for the routes.  The plan aims to boost the country’s economy by reducing energy costs by 400 billion baht as Thailand focuses more on rail travel at the expense of road transport.  At the moment, rail accounts for only two percent of all traffic and roads for 80 percent.  The price of oil internationally is expected to double within the next five years with likely big increases in the cost of petrol. Pansak Vinyaratn, chief adviser to the prime minister, said that hi-speed trains are necessary to ensure solid growth of the country’s economy as Thailand would otherwise lose competitiveness in the long run.  Second-phase construction would mean that Bangkok would link by hi-speed rail to Chiang Mai, Nong Khai, Rayong and Hat Yai by 2022.  The new railway networks will serve both passengers and cargo, including faster transport of agricultural goods which tend to deteriorate if carried long distances by slow lorries. The details of the new routes, including the exact location of stations, have not yet been decided.  Pattaya’s tourism industry is expected to gain hugely with the arrival of a 20 minute fast train service from Bangkok or Suvarnabhumi to the seaside resort.  A City Hall source told Pattaya Today, “The current rail station is far out of the city in east Pattaya, so we are hoping that the railhead for the new hi-speed trains will be nearer the downtown area.”  Another suggestion is to build a monorail track to take passengers directly from the hi-speed train to the centres of Pattaya and Jomtien. The latest rail project will be a huge step forward in enabling Pattaya to triple its receipts from tourism by the end of the decade or soon afterwards.  Other infrastructure improvements already agreed to or in the pipeline are a beach reclamation project, more by-pass roads and tunnels, a better waste disposal system, increased supplies of potable water and several “green” projects. Critics of the scheme caution that the Pattaya authorities must ensure that the infrastructure improvements are in place before the deluge of visitors expected once the hi-speed train is operational.  “Thousands may arrive and depart by train but they will need to use the roads during their stay.  The traffic queues and pollution could easily get a lot worse if the timing is wrong,” said a prominent Pattaya businessman and estate agent. With the advent of the Asean Economic Community in 2015, a free-trade area of 10 countries in the region, economists say that the hi-speed rail plans will enhance Thailand as the logistics hub of South East Asia with all the basic infrastructure such as inland transport and rail and deep seaports to carry the expected increase in freight across national frontiers.  Also scheduled for completion in 2018 is Dawei port in Myanmar, a deep water facility with major Thai funding, which will speed up the transport of goods between Asean countries and beyond to India.

NEWS

Minibus flips on way to Hat Yai

Published on 27/08/2012

» PHUKET: A minibus from the government-owned Transport Co Ltd, bound from Phuket to Hat Yai, slid off a curve in rain near Phang Nga township Sunday evening (August 26), landing on its side on the central divider.

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NEWS & PR

There's nothing like a sure bet

B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 18/07/2010

» Can an octopus really predict the outcome of a football match? Krissana says it can. I say it can't. And living in Thailand, I am so clearly in the minority it would have been better to have kept my mouth shut this week about Paul the octopus.