What's new

China's Silk Road revival steams ahead as cargo train arrives in Iran

Daneshmand

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 5, 2014
Messages
3,109
Reaction score
43
Country
Iran, Islamic Republic Of
Location
Pakistan
China's Silk Road revival steams ahead as cargo train arrives in Iran | Business | The Guardian



Goods travel 6,462 miles in 14 days as part of efforts to resurrect ancient trade route connecting east with Europe


The cargo train travelled from eastern China through Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, arriving in the Iranian capital Tehran. Photograph: Stringer/EPA

A long-distance cargo train has travelled from China to Iran as part of an attempted revival of the ancient Silk Road, a trans-Asian trade route connecting the east to Europe and the Mediterranean Sea.

The 32-container train, which arrived in Tehran on Monday, took 14 days to complete the 6,462 mile (10,399km) journey from China’s eastern Zhejiang province through Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan – one month less than the sea route from Shanghai to the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas.

Iranian officials have indicated that the ultimate aim is to extend the rail route toEurope, positioning Iran on a key stretch to the continent. The train, which departed from Zhejiang’s trading hub Yiwu, travelled an average of more than 700km a day.

“Countries along the Silk Road are striving to revive the ancient network of trade routes,” said Mohsen Pour Seyed Aghaei, president of the Islamic Republic of Iran Railways company, according to Iran’s semi-official Mehr news agency. “The arrival in Tehran of the train in less than a fortnight has been an unprecedented achievement.”

He said the train had outstripped “truck and road transport” and demonstrated the great advantage of the route.

China is Iran’s biggest trading partner. Commercial ties continued despite decade-long international sanctions over Tehran’s nuclear programme, which were lifted in January after last year’s landmark nuclear deal.

Last month, Chinese president Xi Jinping became the first global leader to visit Tehran since the sanctions were lifted. The two nations signed an agreement on boosting trade to $600bn (£420bn) over the next decade.

The revived Silk Road is envisioned as a rail and sea route, part of China’s “One Belt, One Road” economic development strategy. An Iranian container ship, the Perarin, arrived in Guangxi in southern China last month, delivering 978 containers from a number of countries along the maritime route.

“Iran is strategically located in the Middle East, sharing land borders with 15 nations and sea channels on its northern and southwestern coasts,” said Iran’s state-owned Press TV. “China sees Iran as a country that can play a crucial role in China’s New Silk Road initiative, given its access to extensive delivery routes connecting to the Middle East and Eurasia.”

In October 2014, a long-distance luxury train, operating in the style of the Orient Express, arrived in the Iranian city of Zanjan from Budapest – the first time a European private train had been permitted to enter Iranian territory. Prices for the two-week tour on the Golden Eagle Danube Express ranged from £8,695 to £13,995 per person.
 
.
So finally the economic corridor becomes operational. Hopefully it will only expand from now on and bring prosperity to all along this transnational transit route. Good days are ahead for everyone along the silk route!

Brought to you by cooperation of Iran and China :cheers:

PS. By the way average train speed is not that great here and should be improved. Probably it is just an expeditionary train so it has stopped many times for this reason, but if the speed can be improved to about 1500 kilometers per day which is not that difficult for legacy trains, then China-Iran route will be less than five days. With high speed trains, it can even be reduced to less than three days.

There is no way ships can compete with it at all. A ship takes over five weeks to reach middle east and more than two months to get to Europe. With high speed trains it will be possible to connect China with Europe via Iran in about one week time.
 
.
This is fabulous news, as it marks the beginning of a new chapter of China's trade around the world.

PS. By the way average train speed is not that great here and should be improved. Probably it is just an expeditionary train so it has stopped many times for this reason, but if the speed can be improved to about 1500 kilometers per day which is not that difficult for legacy trains, then China-Iran route will be less than five days. With high speed trains, it can even be reduced to less than three days.

There is no way ships can compete with it at all. A ship takes over five weeks to reach middle east and more than two months to get to Europe. With high speed trains it will be possible to connect China with Europe via Iran in about one week time.

I am certain that a China-Iran HSR project will commence sooner rather than later. What's your guess, @AndrewJin?
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom