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The Great Game Changer: Belt and Road Intiative (BRI; OBOR)

@Gibbs

Sorry for being cynical but the two sides in Sri Lanka were playing politics and use it to their advantage at different times.

Srisena won the elections because of his "opposition" to China's investments. As soon as he won, he suspended the projects on the pretext of re-examining them. I knew it won't last long, it was all a big show. (Sounds very much like what another leader is doing now in his country, LOL).

In the final analysis when faced with reality, they will find that it's still "money talks, bullsh*t walks".

Now, Rajapaksa is doing the same thing as what Srisena did.

The Belt and Road won't in fact be an easy ride for China to construct. Too many actors and interests are involved. I think this is anticipated.

The worst case, nonetheless, is when domestic infighting is involved. Then, rationality is shelved and emotions and partisanship prevail.

To overcome this, China tries to institutionalize the OBOR, adding some punitive powers in case of serious defection.
 
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@Gibbs

Sorry for being cynical but the two sides in Sri Lanka were playing politics and use it to their advantage at different times.

Srisena won the elections because of his "opposition" to China's investments. As soon as he won, he suspended the projects on the pretext of re-examining them. I knew it won't last long, it was all a big show. (Sounds very much like what another leader is doing now in his country, LOL).

In the final analysis when faced with reality, they will find that it's still "money talks, bullsh*t walks".

Now, Rajapaksa is doing the same thing as what Srisena did.

Agreed

I guess it's a learning curve for the Chinese too, It's not the same when dealing with advanced economies and mature nations with solid national pilocies, and with these third world politicians

China can well do not to put all thier eggs in one basket like they did with the Rajapaksa regime.. I guess lessons learnt for the better
 
China could beat Japan on bullet train projects in Southeast Asia

By Chu Daye Source: Global Times Published: 2017/2/8


Railway rivals

Following news that Thailand and Malaysia are set to begin talks on the construction of a 1,500-kilometer high-speed railway (HSR) linking Bangkok in Thailand and Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia, Chinese experts said that Chinese HSRs have more merits than their Japanese competitor - called shinkansen. The Bangkok-Kuala Lumpur railway will be a new addition to the 3,900-kilometer pan-Asia railway network that is already taking shape. Chinese experts said it makes more sense for customers to choose a Chinese solution, as owning two systems will backfire in terms of maintenance.

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A high-speed train enters a railway station in Luoyang, Central China's Henan Province, in September 2016. Photo: CFP


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Graphics: GT

Thailand and Malaysia are set to start talks on the construction of a high-speed railway (HSR) between their capitals, Japanese media reported on Monday.

Arkhom Termpittayapaisiht, Thailand's transport minister, said discussions will cover which purveyors of high-speed rail expertise will be involved in the project, according to a report in the Nikkei Asian Review. They could be "China or Japan" or "China and Japan," though the Thai minister said Malaysia seems to favor China.

China will jump at the chance if Thailand and Malaysia ask for help with the planned HSR project, the report said. Japan is also eager, setting the stage for a battle between the two countries.

The pan-Asia railway network is tied into China's "One Belt and One Road" (B&R) initiative. Formally called the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, the B&R initiative was proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013 to boost connectivity and trade among Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa. The pan-Asia railway's long-term goal is to allow trains to run to Singapore from Kunming, capital of Southwest China's Yunnan Province.

China's interests

Experts contacted by the Global Times took the news in stride, believing that the HSR project between Singapore and Kuala Lumpur is more deserving of attention. They also said that the Chinese railway export package is better than Japan's, which is also good.

"Speaking for myself, I think China should be interested, as the China-Laos railway, the Laos-Thailand railway, and the Thailand-Malaysia railway are all part of the pan-Asia railway network," said Huang Ningshu, vice director of the China-Laos Railway Project. The 417.9-kilometer-railway connects Kunming with Vientiane, capital of Laos.

China will be duly interested in the latest news about the Thailand-Malaysia railway, but its focus will remain on the Singapore-Malaysia railway, which is in a far more advanced stage of development, said Sun Zhang, a railway expert and professor at Shanghai-based Tongji University.

In December 2016, Malaysia and Singapore formalized the details on the Kuala Lumpur-Singapore HSR project. The countries will solicit two international tenders by the end of 2017.

Regarding the Thailand-Malaysia railway, Sun said that Thailand, as the potential buyer, has the right to shop around.

Given that customer country will try to play China and Japan against each other in tit-for-tat competition to get the best deal, it behooves the Chinese side to study Southeast Asian customers' needs more carefully and more convincingly demonstrate its advantages, noted Sun.

"For the Singapore-Kuala Lumpur HSR, it has to compete with a mature commercial aviation market that has as many as 45 flights a day between the two cities," Sun told the Global Times on Tuesday.

"So the HSR in this section of the pan-Asia railway has to run at a speed of 350 kilometers per hour to be competitive. Faster trains cost more to operate, so we need to show our customer that we can deliver that speed at a reasonable cost," Sun said.

Sun said Japan will find it difficult to do so.

On other sections, like the Thailand-Malaysia railway, speed is less of an issue because there are not as many flights between the two countries. Sun said the managers of the project will like a low-cost package for a railway line that runs at 250 kilometers per hour.

"We needs to study these matters thoroughly to make sure that what we offer is accurately aligned with our customer's need," Sun said.

Japan's shinkansen bullet train technology is already running in the island of Taiwan, and Japan has also signed deals in India and Thailand.

In 2015, however, Japan lost out to China for the Jakarta-Bandung HSR project in Indonesia.

Currently Thailand is planning a shinkansen project between Bangkok and Chiang Mai and a Sino-Thai HSR project linking the Laotian border.

Buyer's interests

For Thailand, a country with somewhat limited finances, having its HSR to be provided by two countries with two different systems means it has to be prepared to pay extra for future maintenance, such as two sets of spare parts, repair services and training for employees, Sun said.

Such maintenance stretches a long time span because it has to cover the entire life span of the purchased products, Sun claimed.

That is 30 years for the rolling stock, 60 years for the railway bridges and 100 years for tunnels, noted Sun.

Experts also pointed out that Japan, being a cluster of islands of limited size, does not have China's experience at either operating a huge HSR network or building in complex terrain such as rain forest. China's high-speed trains have proved themselves in its southwestern provinces, which share a similar geography with Southeast Asia.

China built the world's largest high-speed rail network in less than a decade.

As of the end of 2016, China operated 20,000 kilometers of HSR track, or 65 percent of the world's total, according to media reports.

"China operates its HSRs across six climate zones and five time zones. Japan has no such experience," said Jia Limin, a professor at Beijing Jiaotong University.

Jia, a leading expert in HSRs, briefed Chinese President Xi Jinping on the technological strengths of Chinese HSRs in June 2016, according to media reports.

"As a late starter, China's high-speed railways utilize newer and more advanced technologies," Jia told the Global Times on Tuesday. "The Chinese technologies also come from a more diversified background, having absorbed both European and Japanese technologies. More importantly, these technologies were proven in mass application, whereas many of Japan's newest technologies have not been proven in actual use."

Experts said the world is big enough for China and Japan to both export their HSR technologies. But any country that builds two HSR systems, one Chinese and one Japanese, will face practical problems.

Unlike China, Japan cannot be physically connected to these countries once the railway is built, denying its user of some practical functions from the connectivity, Sun said.

"When rolling stock needs an upgrade - which they will need to do in their long life cycle - they can be actually driven back to China into a Chinese plant for a speedy upgrade at a reasonable cost," noted Sun. "If the rolling stock is made in Japan, however, the customer country has to do the upgrade on its own in plants that won't need to be built if they take the Chinese option."
 
Experts said the world is big enough for China and Japan to both export their HSR technologies. But any country that builds two HSR systems, one Chinese and one Japanese, will face practical problems.
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As this is the OBOR thread, my suggestion is for China to focus on OBOR countries and leave the non-OBOR countries to Japan, France, Spain or Germany.

Reason being, China has an advantage in funding projects in OBOR participating countries.
 
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As this is the OBOR thread, my suggestion is for China to focus on OBOR countries and leave the non-OBOR countries to Japan, France, Spain or Germany.

Reason being, China has an advantage in funding projects in OBOR participating countries.

But that would practically mean that Japan be kept from SEA, Central Asia, Eastern and Western Europe, and the Middle East markets.

What remains is the Americas and Africa.

But, in any case, customers really need to make a choice; China-Japan combination may not work well because of inherent compatibility issues.

I am certain of such a likelihood because Taiwan has been experiencing the problems of outsourcing the metro to Japan and Germany. For this reason, almost for three years the Taipei-Taoyuan metro line will come online.

In Mainland China, this would not take no more than several months to complete and become operational.
 
But that would practically mean that Japan be kept from SEA, Central Asia, Eastern and Western Europe, and the Middle East markets.

What remains is the Americas and Africa.

But, in any case, customers really need to make a choice; China-Japan combination may not work well because of inherent compatibility issues.

I am certain of such a likelihood because Taiwan has been experiencing the problems of outsourcing the metro to Japan and Germany. For this reason, almost for three years the Taipei-Taoyuan metro line will come online.

In Mainland China, this would not take no more than several months to complete and become operational.
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IMHO tenders for the trains/HSR in North America, India and Middle East to be given to Japan, France, Spain and Germany to focus. Western Europe have their home grown HSRs.

China is better off focusing on OBOR countries, i.e. SEA, Russia, Central Asia, Eastern Europe, Africa and South America. In all these places, China is already involved in the infrastructure and have funding advantages. Technically, South America is not in OBOR.

China should also look at the HSR in Australia too. However, our HSR is the "HSR that runs during elections". After each election, it's back to business as usual. We have been taking about HSR for decades but nothing happens. Sigh! By the way, we want to be in OBOR too.
 
Absurd? China And Kazakhstan's Remote Cross-Border FTZ May Finally Be Set To Boom
Wade Shepard , CONTRIBUTOR
FEB 9, 2017 @ 12:41 AM
I travel to emerging markets around Asia and report on what I find.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.


The first time I visited the International Center for Boundary Cooperation “Khorgos” (ICBC) was in May of 2015. At that time, I found a bi-national free trade zone straddling the China / Kazakhstan border that was basically a Chinese “cheap stuff” market flung out on the Eurasian steppes that was mired in a stagnant position between conception and vitalization. On the Chinese side there were five three-story marketplaces where vendors rented out booths to sell run of the mill, no-brand apparel, car tires, and plastic toys tax-free. On the Kazakh side, the scene was much grimmer: there was nothing but a temporary "nomad" tent selling Kazakh chocolates and imported Georgian wine that was set up next to a burning pile of garbage, and not much else.

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The opening ceremony for the first trade center on the Kazakhstan side of the ICBC free trade zone. Image: ICBC "Khorgos."

In the spring of 2015 it was easy to be critical of the ICBC. However, I ended my otherwise disparaging article about this visit on a guardedly positive note:

But what needs to be kept in perspective is that not only a new free trade zone is being created here but an entirely new economy. The ICBC is just one part of a multi-faceted development initiative to build an entirely new conurbation of trade, manufacturing, and logistics in a place where it didn't exist before. The adjacent Khorgos Eastern Gate Special Economic Zone and Khorgos Gateway dry port is estimated to attract 30,000 workers and their families, while the new city of Horgos on the Chinese side is being built for 200,000 people. All of these projects have synergy with the ICBC, and such large-scale development everywhere takes not years but decades.

Nearly two years after this first visit, I returned to the ICBC, and I must report that even after a string of political, financial, and corruption mishaps, nobody has given up on the place. As the new Chinese city of Horgos blossoms into an urbanized area of 30-story high-rise towers and a new epicenter for robotics manufacturing, the Khorgos Gateway dry port -- the catalyst for a "new Dubai" -- on the Kazakh side of the border doubles its container volume each year, and the Western Europe-Western China Highway, which passes right through Khorgos on its way from the coast of China to the Baltic Sea at St. Petersburg, gets set to officially open, the ICBC seems to have worked out some of its kinks and kicked development into another gear.

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The new trade center on the Kazakhstan side of the ICBC. Image: Wade Shepard.

I entered the free trade zone from Kazakstan this time, and it became immediately apparent that some major changes had occurred since my last visit. There was a large warehouse of Senko-Lancaster, a Japanese / Kazakh joint venture that’s focused on distributing goods from China to other Silk Road countries that just opened three months ago. Around the corner was a new hotel that started being built last year by a Kazakh developer and a Chinese partner. A little ways away was a large trade center that was being developed via a Turkish / Kazakh JV that was at a mid-point of construction. In the center of it all was a massive new Kazakh / Chinese trade center called Samruk Central Square, which opened for business last summer — the first substantial commercial operation to open on the Kazakh side in the five year history of the ICBC. And, yes, that laughable tent and burning pile of garbage have long been removed.

If anybody knows the story of the ICBC, it’s Ravil Budukov. A Chinese-educated Kazakh, he has been with the project from around the time it first began in December of 2011. He showed up fresh out of college from Suzhou, and eventually rose up to become the chief officer of the International Department on the Kazakh side.

I asked Budukov what had happened, how did Kazakhstan transform their part of the ICBC from having next to nothing to showing glimmers of coming to life in such a short period of time?

“When they started, nobody in the world had any experience with this," he replied simply. "There were no laws and they didn't know how to administer it."

There is nowhere in the world like the ICBC. It is a bi-national, quasi-extra territorial free trade zone that has its own legal, tax, and immigration regimes. While China has the political nimbleness to quickly restructure its policies and laws to adhere to the ambitions of its national projects, in Kazakhstan this is a little more challenging. But now, Budukov said, the proper administrative procedures and laws have been worked out, and the results are apparent.

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Construction on the Kazakh side of the ICBC. Image: Wade Shepard.

Funding the ICBC was also an issue for Kazakhstan. While the China side had an almost unlimited budget backed by Beijing — with $4 billion already being pumped in with reserves on the way — Kazakhstan was wallowing in the middle of a dire economic crisis. The combination of plunging oil and gas prices, which caused a 40% drop in national revenue, along with the devastated Russian economy and the economic slow-down in China -- two of the country's main trading partners -- left Kazakhstan adrift in a perfect storm of economic calamities. While developing its transportation infrastructure and diversifying its economy with projects such as the ICBC are part of the country’s "path to the future," finding the money for it in the meantime proved challenging. Partially to these ends, every project that is currently in development on the Kazakh side of the ICBC are international joint ventures.

The Chinese side has also grown at a rapid clip since my last visit. In addition to the five large shopping centers, branches of all five of China’s big banks, a large hotel, and a Jiangsu province-sponsored business center that were previously in operation, I saw three more trade centers, a massive exhibition hall, another hotel, and what will soon become the Silk Road Tower — an iconic 300-meter-high observation tower — that were all at various stages of construction.

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The new museum on the Chinese side of the ICBC that is reputedly set to open soon. Image: Wade Shepard.

But what I found most interesting was the museum that was recently built next to the construction site for the tower, which I was told would open after the Chinese New Year holiday.

When the ICBC was announced it was not only marketed as a cross-border, tax-free commercial zone, but as a hub for entertainment and inter-cultural exchange. It was to be a place where merchants and travelers from across China, Central Asia, Russia, Turkey, and Europe could meet in the middle and stay for 30 days visa-free to dine on each other’s cuisine and share each other’s entertainment, along with buying each other's products. The master plan called for hotels, restaurants, museums, amusement parks, an anthropological center, casinos, spas, and a university for foreign languages. It was to become a modern caravanserai, a vibrant international hub where all of the countries of the revived Silk Road could join together. Such “people to people” exchanges have become a central theme of China’s Belt and Road initiative, and at every station along the way where China has a major presence there are not only plans for logistics hubs, manufacturing zones, and warehouses, but cultural, shopping, and entertainment facilities as well.
 
“We hope that this center will be the biggest tourist center in the world. Not only Chinese or Kazakh but other countries, cultures, to all come and meet in the middle,” said Kaharman Jazin, the new president of the ICBC.

There is also more of an international presence here in the ICBC than I witnessed before. This place isn’t just meant to be for trade between China and Kazakhstan, but is intended to be a great market that connects China with the entire CIS and potentially even Europe beyond, and this is particular true for the Eurasian Economic Union — the customs area that includes Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Belarus, and Armenia — that the ICBC is on the border of. The next phase of development for this emerging free trade zone consists of expanding its reach out through this region, and Budukov is currently running a traveling road show, going from country to country trying to entice investors to come and set up operations on the doorstep of China.

According to Budukov, 10,000 visitors from China and 3,000 visitors from Kazakhstan are currently coming into the ICBC each day — which is up from the 1,500 daily visitors that were coming at the time of my previous visit.


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A duty free shopping center on the Chinese side of the ICBC. Image: Wade Shepard.

Another long-term aim of the ICBC is to become a place where visitors don’t only come to buy more or less utilitarian items at a cheaper price but also the luxury items that are trending throughout Asia. While there are signs advertising the presence of Chanel, Calvin Klein, Clinique, Prada, and Gucci in the ICBC, a visitor would be hard-pressed to find any of these luxury products actually being sold here. I walked through one trade center on the Chinese side that boasted the presence of luxury brands only to find the displays empty. The workers told me that the would be restocked after the Chinese New Year holiday. Maybe.
But even if these luxury products were actually sold here, the import restrictions of both the Eurasian Economic Union and China would hamper their sales volumes. Visitors can only take 50 kilos or 1,500 euros worth of merchandise tax-free per month out of the ICBC and into Kazakhstan. While China has an 8,000 yuan (US$1,250) daily limit. There are reports of a cottage industry that has developed in the nearby Kazakh town of Zharkent, where local high-school and college students carry merchandise out of the ICBC for shoppers who wish to buy more tax-free than the import restrictions allow.

“Do you feel as if this is a major problem limiting the potential success of the ICBC?” I asked both Kaharman and Budukov.

“Yes,” they both replied in unison.

“Is there anything that you can do about it?”

Kaharman just shook his head and smiled. This is an issue that’s even higher than Astana; it goes straight to the heart of the Eurasian Economic Union — straight to Moscow, who hasn't been the biggest fan of the whole ICBC concept, to put it mildly.

This entire stretch of the China / Kazakhstan border region is being cultivated as a massive bi-national conurbation of development -- all of the various projects have synergy with each other and are ultimately rising up in unison. This development zone is a national-level ambition of both China and Kazakhstan, and the political will and funding is there to take it to fruition — perhaps by any means necessary. To repeat an adage that has become popular during China’s decades-long development boom, the ICBC may in fact be "too big to fail," and may potentially become the central market of the entire New Silk Road.

I'm the author of Ghost Cities of China. I'm currently traveling the New Silk Road doing research for a new book. Follow by RSS.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshe...tz-may-finally-be-set-to-boom/2/#7d2166731434

Here Are 5 Ways China's New Silk Road Is Good For Western Companies


Alex Capri ,

CONTRIBUTOR

I write about international trade and cross-border business.

Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.


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A sign shows the distance in kilometers to various destinations as a freight train transporting containers laden with goods from China, arrives at DB Cargo's London Eurohub rail freight depot in Barking, east London on January 18, 2017, from Yiwu in the eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang. NIKLAS HALLE'N/AFP/Getty Images.

China’s One-Belt-One-Road initiative is the most ambitious infrastructure project in history. Referred to as "OBOR," this immense network of planned highways, railways, energy grids and port facilities will create economic corridors between 65 countries in Asia, Africa and Europe.

But Beijing's high profile gambit is viewed with suspicion by outsiders. Many foreign observers regard OBOR as the Chinese ruling party's grand design to establish geopolitical hegemony throughout Asia and beyond. To underscore the OBOR initiative, Beijing has also been the chief architect behind two other Sino-centric projects: the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) -- which, if ratified, would become the world’s largest multilateral free trade agreement -- and the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).

All of this needs to be put into the context of the latest political drama coming out of Washington. When viewed together with the Trump Administration’s rejection of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)—as well as the new President’s apparent abdication of responsibility regarding America’s longstanding leadership role in the neoliberal world order— it’s clear that the OBOR initiative could fundamentally change today’s geopolitical landscape and redraw the map of global trade.


Which begs the question: Is it realistic for U.S. and other Western firms to expect good business opportunities within the OBOR? This question becomes even more compelling as the public dialog between the U.S. and China grows increasingly hostile and confrontational.

Even without the complications of deteriorating political relationships, infrastructure projects in emerging markets always present firms with a multitude of uncertainties. And given OBOR’s massive scale, many sceptics think the initiative is unrealistic.
But Beijing has done a masterful job when it comes to big infrastructure projects. China Inc. understands that infrastructure is the backbone of connectivity, and connectivity is the lifeblood of modern day commerce. Even if it doesn’t reach its full potential, OBOR’s connective corridors will redefine regional supply chains, create new markets, and redraw the map of today’s production networks.

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Thus, despite many risks, OBOR presents multinational businesses with historic possibilities.

The challenge for Western companies, therefore, is two-fold: first, they must identify OBOR’s true opportunities; second, they must gauge their tolerance to a wide range of risks.
Identifying OBOR’s Opportunities

Here are five key areas of interest for Western firms.

Capacity Building – OBOR’s massive funding requirements must come from both public institutions and private investors. To date, private investors have stayed away. Chinese state owned banks generally lack transparency and are widely perceived to suffer from the ill effects of corruption and poor management. This creates a window of opportunity for Western professional services firms, particularly those specializing in accountancy, consultancy, banking and insurance. The presence of these firms, as they work with local partners to implement good governance and transparency, will make OBOR more attractive to private banks and investors.

Clean Energy and Sustainable Projects – China’s recent endorsement of the Paris Agreement — and President Xi Jin Ping’s proclamation that China will lead the world in the fight against climate change — will create an opening for foreign firms. Here, Western engineering firms and energy companies can find real opportunities to participate in sustainable projects with Chinese SOEs and local firms. This also provides an opening for Western NGOs, as they work with key stakeholders.

Strategic Value Chains – As new OBOR corridors connect economic zones, Western MNEs will have access to labor pools in Central Asia, Southeast Asia and Africa. The global footwear and wearing apparel industry, in particular, will have opportunities to relocate manufacturing centers and other value-adding activities along OBOR, as wages and other costs escalate in China. These new value chains will provide faster access to key markets in Europe and Asia, given their connectivity to high speed rail networks.


New Markets for Consumer Goods – As OBOR’s functional infrastructure expands, new population clusters will emerge along its main arterials, providing new “local” markets and new consumers. Western brands, from hand phone makers to pharmaceutical companies, should push to capture market share. As customer bases along OBOR grow, Western MNEs — which enjoy high brand value and good reputations — will have the opportunity to reengineer their supply chains and to perform manufacturing closer to their customers.

Faster Transit Times – OBOR will allow faster transit times for cargo. DHL Global Forwarding, one of the world’s largest freight companies, is already routing increasing amounts of freight along the “Belt,” from the city of Lianyungang, China, all the way to Istanbul. Transit times are just 14 days. For MNEs throughout Asia, a new logistical window is opening, offering a variety of new routes, distribution hubs and supply chain networks. As more MNEs route their cargo via OBOR, their legacy logistics providers will be compelled to offer end-to-end services across the OBOR network.

Dealing With OBOR’s Risks

Initially it will not be easy for U.S. and other Western firms to compete in an environment that is heavily influenced by Beijing’s central planners and SOEs. Chinese companies in the construction, banking, steel, high-speed rail and energy sectors will dominate early infrastructure efforts. Local competitors will also present obstacles to foreign firms. And the usual emerging market risks will be ever present: lack of transparency and uniformity within regulatory environments, corruption, macro-economic and financial risks — even supply chain security risks.

Eventually, however, state-sponsored development will have to give way to pragmatic collaboration between Chinese SOEs, local companies and foreign firms. The sheer scale and amount of capital — both monetary and human — needed to create the infrastructure of OBOR will compel all parties to seek the most optimal partnerships. This will have to involve the world’s best-in-class foreign companies.

For now, uncertainty prevails.

Western companies will need to adopt a wait-and-see strategy and hope that Washington and Beijing walk-back their tough rhetoric and find a way to craft a coherent, stable working arrangement. Given today’s geopolitical environment, this is far from guaranteed.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/alexcap...is-good-for-western-companies/2/#3d65b16b1dc4
 
China is going to give the Belt & Road Initiative a big push this year.

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Chinese vice premier urges new breakthroughs in Belt and Road development
(Xinhua) 20:45, February 10, 2017

Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli on Friday called for greater progress to be achieved in projects under the Belt and Road Initiative this year.

Significant headway should be achieved in certain principal areas, Zhang told attendees of a work conference on Belt and Road development in 2017.

The vice premier demanded "high-quality" work to ensure that the Belt and Road forum for international cooperation, which will be held in Beijing in May, is a success.

Areas to be developed further include infrastructure connectivity, and trade and investment cooperation along the Belt and Road, Zhang said.

He also said more detailed measures were needed to prevent risks and enhance people-to-people exchanges.

The Belt and Road Initiative, an infrastructure and trade network connecting Asia with Europe and Africa along ancient trade routes, was first put forward by President Xi Jinping in 2013.

While originating in China, the initiative has delivered benefits well beyond its borders. So far, more than 40 countries and international organizations have signed cooperation agreements with China under the initiative.

The upcoming Belt and Road forum will explore ways to address regional and global economic problems, generate fresh energy for interconnected development, and ensure that the initiative brings greater benefits to people of the countries involved, Xi said in January.
 
http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1032560.shtml
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor aims to boost trade between two countries
By Ma Jingjing Source:Global Times Published: 2017/2/12 20:08:39

Xinjiang gets taste of South Asian seafood

For the first time, the residents of Northwest China'sXinjiangUyghur Autonomous Region were able to eat seafood imported from Pakistan by container cars through the Khunjerab Pass in January. This successful trial is expected to improve overland trade between China and Pakistan via the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, which accounts for 2 percent of the overall trade between the two countries. Meanwhile, the Xinjiang government has decided to invest more than 170 billion yuan ($24.72 billion) in a road network between China and Pakistan to improve transportation capability. However, experts noted that there remain challenges to the growth of bilateral trade, such as a lack of infrastructure and insufficient consumer demand in western China.


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A ship carrying containers in Gwadar port, Pakistan, in November 2016 Photo: CFP

The first batch of Indian Ocean seafood shipped by container cars arrived in Northwest China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region through the Khunjerab Pass on January 13, marking the first time that Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous county, Kashgar prefecture, has received imported seafood.

"We imported 7.46 tons of seafood, including prawns, cuttlefish and squid, worth $26,700. It was sold mainly in western China," said Chen Hai'ou, president of Kashgar Mufeng Biotechnology Co.

The frozen seafood was shipped from the port of Karachi in southern Pakistan to the port of Sost in northern Pakistan, and then transported to China via the Karakoram Highway.

The highway, also known as China-Pakistan Friendship Highway, which connects Xinjiang and northern Pakistan, stretches more than 1,000 kilometers across the Karakoram, Himalayas and Hindu Kush mountains.

Chen said that the container cars started from Pakistan in November 2016 and entered the Khunjerab Pass before the Karakoram Highway closed for the winter. The closure lasts from December to April each year.

This trial shipment is meaningful because it illustrates the growth of overland trade between the two countries since the highway was rebuilt and extended in 2013, said Zhou Rong, a senior research fellow at the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at Renmin University of China.

The highway greatly reduced the transnational transportation time.

"It used to take 30 to 40 days to ship goods to Xinjiang [from Pakistan], but we can now receive goods in about 10 days through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC)," Chen told the Global Times on Wednesday.

It was also 10 percent cheaper than transporting seafood from coastal cities in China, Chen noted.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang proposed the 3,000-kilometer CPEC, which links Xinjiang and Pakistan's Gwadar port, during his visit to Pakistan in May 2013.

As part of China's "One Belt and One Road" initiative, the project aims to strengthen economic cooperation in transportation, energy and other industries.

Revitalized trade

The first shipment of seafood imported via the overland channel will invigorate bilateral trade and will have a demonstration effect on other companies, said Cao Lei, chief of Khunjerab Pass.

China imports an average of 3.9 million to 4.1 million tons of seafood each year, though a small proportion comes from Pakistan, said Cui He, vice chairman of the China Aquatic Products Processing and Marketing Association. The South Asian country doesn't rank among the top 20 seafood importers to China.

However, given that Pakistan doesn't consume a lot of seafood and its seafood resources remain well preserved, it is likely to boost overland shipments to Xinjiang, Cui told the Global Times on Saturday.

Currently, 98 percent of trade between the two countries is by sea, Cao was quoted as saying in a report of domestic news portal chinanews.com on February 4. Bilateral trade across Khunjerab Pass accounts for the remaining 2 percent.

For their part, Chinese companies will likely increase overland exports of large mechanical equipment and construction materials such as cement and steel to Pakistan as they contract more infrastructure projects under the CPEC, Zhou said.

In addition, the CPEC has made it more convenient for domestic companies to transport goods to Pakistan, where they can arrive in the northern city of Sost, he said. In the past, containers were shipped through the port of Karachi, where they had to go through customs.

Chen is also optimistic about the prospects that the CPEC will revitalize overland trade. "Besides seafood, we will import fruit and other agricultural products in line with domestic needs," he said, noting he is discussing importing fruit with Pakistani companies.

Eddie Wong, CEO of Shenzhen Hezhengyuan Group, the parent company of Kashgar Mufeng Biotechnology Co, told the Global Times on Sunday that the company will continue to import cotton and sugar in the second phase.

Meanwhile, his firm is negotiating with their Pakistani counterparts to export reasonable cost garments to the country.

Meanwhile, Xinjiang will devote a huge amount of funding in 2017 to building up a highway network to further improve transportation between the two countries, the Associated Press of Pakistan reported on Tuesday.

This year, the region will invest 170 billion yuan ($24.72 billion) in building new roads, 8.1 billion yuan into railway construction and 4.8 billion yuan in civil aviation projects, the report said, noting the total will surpass the combined investment in transportation infrastructure from 2011 to 2015.

Demanding challenges

The CPEC is supposed to bring earth-shaking changes to Pakistan's economy, but has yet to do so due to factors including lack of necessary infrastructure and low consumer demand in western China, Zhou said.

For example, an oil and gas pipeline in Pakistan linking the Middle East and China has not been connected, and thus the country can't get oil transit fees, he explained.

Although the Karakoram Highway is expected to boost overland trade between the two neighbors, objective factors make it hard to measure to what extent the corridor will contribute to its bilateral trade.

The highway's width of roughly six to 10 meters, which may not be able to handle enough traffic, and landslides may occur due to the complex topography, Zhou said. Most important of all, the highway is closed during winter, directly limiting the volume of transported goods.

Pakistan's supply level and western China's consumption demand is another problem that needs to be worked out, Cui told the Global Times on Saturday.

To increase bilateral trade, Xinjiang and western China need to boost their demand for goods from South Asia and the Middle East, Zhou noted.
 
http://dailytimes.com.pk/features/16-Feb-17/china-pakistan-economic-corridor-an-insight
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor : An insight

china-pakistan-economic-corridor-an-insight-1a454567e41dd0500d03951b15df0ae6.jpg

By: Tariq Mushtaq
16-Feb-17

The China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is currently under construction at a cost of $46 billion which is intended to rapidly expand and upgrade Pakistani infrastructure, as well as deepen and broaden economic links between Pakistan and the People's Republic of China.

58a591d50b092.png


Infrastructure projects under the aegis of CPEC will span the length and breadth of Pakistan, and will eventually link the Pakistani city of Gwadar in southwestern to China's northwestern autonomous region of Xinjiang via a vast network of highways and railways. Proposed infrastructure projects are worth approximately $11 billion, and will be financed by heavily-subsidized concessionary loans at an interest rate of 1.6% that will be dispersed to the Government of Pakistan by the “Exim Bank of China”- “China Development Bank” and the “Industrial and Commercial Bank of China”.

Expected Development:

    • 1350 kilometer long motorway will be constructed which will connect all major cities and Chinese border with Gawadar. Presently work to link Gawadar with Quetta by six lane motorway is in progress.
    • A separate double carriage network will be constructed between Gawadar and all major Cities connecting Gawadar with Chinese Border and Afghan border, which will be only for transportation of containers.
    • Pakistan's railway network will also be extended to eventually connect to China's Southern Xinjiang Railway in Kashgar. This track will be laid alongside Karakoram Highway for which Chinese engineers have already started paper work.
    • A network of pipelines to transport liquefied natural gas and oil will also be laid as part of the project, including a $2.5 billion pipeline between Gawadar and Nawabshah to transport gas from Iran.
    • At Gawadar a state of the art international airport will be constructed with two separate terminals. One for cargo transportation between Gawadar and China, the second for international flights as a huge number of air transportation is expected through Gawadar international airport.
Plans for a corridor, stretching from the Chinese border to Pakistan's deep water ports on the Arabian Sea, dates back to the 1960s and motivated construction of the Karakoram Highway beginning in 1967. Chinese interest in Pakistan's deep-water harbour at Gawadar had been rekindled by 2000, and in 2002 China began construction at Gawadar port which is still under completion because of political instability in Pakistan. Gawadar Port is deepest in the region. Chabahar port of Iran in approximately 11 meters in depth whereas Gawadar’s depth is much more than this.

58a5957eed8af.png


EXPECTED FINANCIAL GAINS:
    • China daily requires six million barrels of oil. Presently its shipment travels 12000 kilometers. If, its shipped through Gawadar the distance is reduced to 3000 kilometers, saving Chinese 20 billion Dollars per annum and Pakistan will get 5 billion dollars against this facility.
58a5949f15587.png
    • It is estimated that around 80,000 trucks / Containers per month will travel toward Gawadar Port from China. Against this facility Pakistan will earn another handsome amount in billions of dollars.
    • It is also estimated that around 100,000 trucks / containers will cross Pakistan to wards Gawadar Port from Central Asian Region and this facility will add good amount in our national exchequer in shape of dollars.
    • When such a huge network of roads and pipes will be constructed, employment in every field will be required, which will help the country for employing labour, technicians, engineers, management graduates and highly technical personnel.
    • With such a huge network of roads, railway and pipelines, number of business opportunities will be raised. These opportunities include hotels, pumps, industrial estates, shopping places and much more, which will again be very helpful for employing people and for contribution in the national exchequer.

INDIAN UNENTHUSIASTIC ROLE:

India and Afghanistan are working jointly to promote Iranian deep sea port of Chabahar against Gawadar Port of Pakistan. This is now an open secret that India is nakedly involved in sponsoring terrorism in Pakistan and to destabilize CPEC project with the active support of Afghan intelligence NDS. Sources added that RAW spy Yadev who is a serving officer in Indian Navy shared certain information during interrogation and such information led to the arrest of a NDS operator who had been living in Pakistan since long for helping terrorists to destabilize areas where CPEC project will run and would connect Gwadar Port to Chinese city of Kashi (Kashgar). These two developments were enough to expose intensive work done by intelligence agencies to make China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) a failure.

Meanwhile, India is trying its best to stop Central Asian states to opt Gwadar Port for their international trade hub as all Central Asia countries are landlocked and they are using mostly Balkan ports and India is luring Central Asia republics to use Chabahar Port of Iran that will be fully operational by December 2016.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi held a tour of the Central Asian Republics (CARs)—Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan in last July and sold the idea of connecting CARs with Chabahar Port through North South Corridor. This Corridor (route) starts from Kandla port of India to Chabahar port of Iran via sea and then moves on towards Central Asia through Iranshar, Zahedan and Mashhad. From Mashhad, it enters to Turkmenistan and crosses Chardzhor and then enters Uzbekistan at Bokhara. It runs from Bokhara to Tashkent and enters Kyrgyzstan via Dzhambul. This routes ends at Almty city of Kazakhstan.

This route will not only be time consuming but also expensive for cargo handlers of Central Asia. Mr. Modi was not very successful to sell this idea because North South Corridor is too long and too expensive option for CARs while Gwadar port of Pakistan is in their proximity (provided peace and security is ensured in Afghanistan as a bed of thorns lies between Pakistan and Central Asia).

Receiving a lukewarm response from Central Asian states during the visit of Mr. Modi, India started work on another option for offering a shorter route to CARs to reach Chabahar port.

Now India has decided to finance a new route that will run in Northern Afghanistan in the proximity of Central Asian borders. India will release a huge amount of over 5 billion rupees for new route that will run which is under consideration, from Heart-Leman-Bala Murghab—Cormach—Maymaneh—Andkhoy—Karamkal—Shaberghan—Aqchach to Mazar Sharif. It may be mentioned that every country of Central Asia is already connected with Mazar Sharif. New road networking will enable Chabahar to connect with other central Asia states while bypassing Turkmenistan and through Afghanistan, minimizing journey and cargo cost for Central Asian states of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan to reach Chabahar port for international trade.

Development observers believe that Indian investment for uplifting road network to connect Chabahar port with Central Asia through a new road networking looks an attempt to diminish the importance of China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) that can be shortest possible route to connect Central Asian republics with Gawadar Port to enhance Central Asian world trade.

India has already invested over $ 960,000 over Route 606 that is also known as Delaram–Zaranj Highway inside Afghanistan. The length of this route is over 200km. It connects Delaram (border city of Afghanistan) to Zaranj (Capital of Nimruz province of Afghanistan). Construction of this project started in 2005 and road was opened for trade in year 2009.

Financial interests of India, Iran and Afghanistan are knotted in Chabahar port while Pakistan’s interests are connected with CPEC and Gwadar port.

This complex situation narrates the saga of fragile relations of Pakistan with its two important neighbours, Iran and Afghanistan and of course the mechanism how India can use both of them against Pakistan anytime it wishes because economic interests are real foundation of foreign relations in today’s world.

But, one thing is essential and there, that Gawadar being the deepest port in the region has an edge over Chabahar, secondly even if CAR doesn’t attach their trade from Gawadar, China’s trade of oil and its commercial trade through Gawadar makes the project feasible. And, if 50% trade of CAR states is added, the profits will be sky high and Pakistan will earn good profits. So, there seems no fear, what so ever the strategy of Indian government towards CPEC, all we require is, to stand affirm and don’t let anybody to create any sort of disturbance in our country. This, I will request to all the parties and all the leaders.

 
Shanxi sends first freight train to Russia

2017-02-17 10:08

People's Daily Online Editor: Wang Fan

U363P886T1D245761F12DT20170217100844.jpg

(Qiao Dong/People's Daily)

The first China-Europe freight train departed Taiyuan, capital city of of Shanxi province for Lesosibirsk, Russia on Feb. 15. It will transport two large, China-made mine excavators to the Russian city.

Compared to the sea route, the freight method shortens overall transportation time by 20 days; it also effectively avoids sea water erosion to the excavators and losses caused by collision. The train provides a new export channel for enterprises based in Shanxi, which boasted the fastest growth rate in exports and imports in China in 2016.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/02-17/245761.shtml
 
山西开出首趟中欧班列 重型挖掘机“远嫁”俄罗斯:enjoy:

2017-02-16 16:17:21

来源:山西日报

关键字:重工铁路一带一路中国精造

山西日报2月15日报道,15日10时56分,75006/5次中俄班列驶出山西太原中鼎物流园,2台具有我国完全自主知识产权的WK-20型大型矿用挖掘机搭乘班列,驶往俄罗斯列索西比尔斯克。这是山西开出的首趟中欧班列,实现了山西到俄罗斯的重型机械铁路直达运输,不仅运输时间比海运缩短20天左右,而且可以有效避免海水侵蚀、晃动碰撞造成的货物损耗。

20170216133923842.jpg


两台“巨无霸”重型挖掘机乘上班列

2月15日,随着一声汽笛长鸣,满载着太重生产的两台WK-20挖掘机的专列徐徐启动,驶向俄罗斯。

首列中欧班列由41节车皮组成,车头为粉红色。太原铁路局营销处副处长苏海春说,由于货物太大,除31节铁路敞车车皮外,另有10节集装箱专用车皮装载太重产品,两台“巨无霸”分别装入20个20英尺国际标准集装箱内,再装载在这10节集装箱车皮上。由于体型巨大,两台“巨无霸”被分解为200多个包装件,这些包装件既有重量不足1吨的轻泡件,也有宽度5米左右的超限件,形状极不规则。为让这些部件平稳乘车,太原铁路局与太重集团相关技术人员针对每个包装件定制化设计装载方案,并采取集装箱内加固等方法,保证每一个部件都平稳牢固。而组成专列的车头和车皮,均是从全国铁路系统其他省份的兄弟单位调运而来

列车从中鼎物流园始发,经满洲里,开往俄罗斯列索西比尔斯克,全程运行6000公里,其中国内2491公里,国外3509公里。列车将于2月20日抵达满洲里,预计3月初到达列索西比尔斯克。

时间缩短20天,运费下降20%

记者了解到,班列运载货物为太重集团生产的WK—20型大型矿用挖掘机,该型挖掘机每台重约800吨,高13.54米,一铲斗就可挖掘矿石20立方米,是名符其实的“巨无霸”。这也是该型挖掘机首次进入俄罗斯市场。“以前也有太重的产品出口俄罗斯,但20立方米的挖掘机,为首次出口。”太原重工矿山设备分公司党委书记马骏介绍,通过中欧班列到俄罗斯列索西比尔斯克,不仅运输时间要比走海运缩短20天,节省20%的运输费用,而且可以有效避免海水侵蚀、晃动碰撞造成的货物损耗,因而成为中俄双方客户的首选运输方式。

20170216133959692.jpg


20170216134112476.png


事实上,组织运送货物的过程,并不容易。苏海春介绍,由于到站客户不具备接卸3吨以上集装箱的能力,太原铁路局在全国中欧班列开行中首次采用了集装箱与敞车混装的形式,对重量3吨之内、适合装箱的货物采用20只20英尺集装箱装运,其余货物采用敞车装运。又因为中国国铁集装箱与俄罗斯集装箱不能互通,局里紧急协调中铁集装箱太原分公司从周边各省紧急调用俄罗斯集装箱装载,全力满足需求。

马骏介绍,由于“巨无霸”产品有相当一部分为超限件和超重件,远远超过了铁路荷载能力,因此这部分超限件不得不采用公路的运输方式,在多方努力推进下,满洲里海关针对此次运输首次提出了“公路货物在铁路海关监管场所同铁路班列货物一起申报,通关后在海关押运状态下从公路口岸出境”的方案,为出口企业提供了极大的通关便利。此外,正常情况下,货运班列均为标准集装箱班列;而本次班列除了10节集装箱车皮装载20个标准集装箱外,还有31节铁路敞车,堪称前所未有的“混搭班列”。

挖掘机将在-50℃区域工作

这趟中欧班列的开行,是太原铁路局服务“一带一路”建设的一次具体实践,更为山西企业走出国门,为“中国制造”走向世界开辟了一条新的更加便捷的通道。

为保证货物及时运到满洲里出关,太原铁路局与太重集团倒排进度、密切协作,按时限、高质量进行装载和调度。中国铁路总公司批准该趟班列按照技术直达进行组织,沿途不改编。

班列自太原启程,途经满洲里,再经贝加尔斯克,中途转为公路运输,货物抵达列索西比尔斯克后,需经过叶尼塞河运往矿区。由于货物过大过重,俄方客户计划采取卡车拉雪橇的方式,从冰面上拖运过河,并且要在3月30日冰河解冻之前,用冰面运输工具从俄罗斯最大河流叶尼塞河的冰面上通过,真可谓铁路、公路、水路三者俱全,最终抵达俄罗斯联邦俄罗斯克拉斯诺亚尔斯克边疆区的列索西比尔斯克站(Лесосибирск)。

望着班列准时驶出,马骏长吁一口气,如释重负。马骏告诉记者,此次货运,组织准备时间最短。算起来,从最初班列的准备工作到正式发车仅用了短短一个半月时间。其间经历了春节假期和春运过程,相关部门和企业在春节期间依然坚守岗位,在汽运、铁路都面临运力紧张的状态下,通过太原铁路局、山西省人民政府口岸办、太原海关、太原国检局等部门通力协作,最终保证班列准时、安全、高效地运行。

几个月后,人们会高兴地看到,这两台“太重牌”挖掘机将会在地处西伯利亚边缘地带、温度在-50℃的俄罗斯极地黄金公司矿区,一展“中国制造”的威力!

http://www.guancha.cn/Project/2017_02_16_394602.shtml
 
山西开出首趟中欧班列 重型挖掘机“远嫁”俄罗斯:enjoy:

2017-02-16 16:17:21

来源:山西日报

关键字:重工铁路一带一路中国精造

山西日报2月15日报道,15日10时56分,75006/5次中俄班列驶出山西太原中鼎物流园,2台具有我国完全自主知识产权的WK-20型大型矿用挖掘机搭乘班列,驶往俄罗斯列索西比尔斯克。这是山西开出的首趟中欧班列,实现了山西到俄罗斯的重型机械铁路直达运输,不仅运输时间比海运缩短20天左右,而且可以有效避免海水侵蚀、晃动碰撞造成的货物损耗。

20170216133923842.jpg


两台“巨无霸”重型挖掘机乘上班列

2月15日,随着一声汽笛长鸣,满载着太重生产的两台WK-20挖掘机的专列徐徐启动,驶向俄罗斯。

首列中欧班列由41节车皮组成,车头为粉红色。太原铁路局营销处副处长苏海春说,由于货物太大,除31节铁路敞车车皮外,另有10节集装箱专用车皮装载太重产品,两台“巨无霸”分别装入20个20英尺国际标准集装箱内,再装载在这10节集装箱车皮上。由于体型巨大,两台“巨无霸”被分解为200多个包装件,这些包装件既有重量不足1吨的轻泡件,也有宽度5米左右的超限件,形状极不规则。为让这些部件平稳乘车,太原铁路局与太重集团相关技术人员针对每个包装件定制化设计装载方案,并采取集装箱内加固等方法,保证每一个部件都平稳牢固。而组成专列的车头和车皮,均是从全国铁路系统其他省份的兄弟单位调运而来

列车从中鼎物流园始发,经满洲里,开往俄罗斯列索西比尔斯克,全程运行6000公里,其中国内2491公里,国外3509公里。列车将于2月20日抵达满洲里,预计3月初到达列索西比尔斯克。

时间缩短20天,运费下降20%

记者了解到,班列运载货物为太重集团生产的WK—20型大型矿用挖掘机,该型挖掘机每台重约800吨,高13.54米,一铲斗就可挖掘矿石20立方米,是名符其实的“巨无霸”。这也是该型挖掘机首次进入俄罗斯市场。“以前也有太重的产品出口俄罗斯,但20立方米的挖掘机,为首次出口。”太原重工矿山设备分公司党委书记马骏介绍,通过中欧班列到俄罗斯列索西比尔斯克,不仅运输时间要比走海运缩短20天,节省20%的运输费用,而且可以有效避免海水侵蚀、晃动碰撞造成的货物损耗,因而成为中俄双方客户的首选运输方式。

20170216133959692.jpg


20170216134112476.png


事实上,组织运送货物的过程,并不容易。苏海春介绍,由于到站客户不具备接卸3吨以上集装箱的能力,太原铁路局在全国中欧班列开行中首次采用了集装箱与敞车混装的形式,对重量3吨之内、适合装箱的货物采用20只20英尺集装箱装运,其余货物采用敞车装运。又因为中国国铁集装箱与俄罗斯集装箱不能互通,局里紧急协调中铁集装箱太原分公司从周边各省紧急调用俄罗斯集装箱装载,全力满足需求。

马骏介绍,由于“巨无霸”产品有相当一部分为超限件和超重件,远远超过了铁路荷载能力,因此这部分超限件不得不采用公路的运输方式,在多方努力推进下,满洲里海关针对此次运输首次提出了“公路货物在铁路海关监管场所同铁路班列货物一起申报,通关后在海关押运状态下从公路口岸出境”的方案,为出口企业提供了极大的通关便利。此外,正常情况下,货运班列均为标准集装箱班列;而本次班列除了10节集装箱车皮装载20个标准集装箱外,还有31节铁路敞车,堪称前所未有的“混搭班列”。

挖掘机将在-50℃区域工作

这趟中欧班列的开行,是太原铁路局服务“一带一路”建设的一次具体实践,更为山西企业走出国门,为“中国制造”走向世界开辟了一条新的更加便捷的通道。

为保证货物及时运到满洲里出关,太原铁路局与太重集团倒排进度、密切协作,按时限、高质量进行装载和调度。中国铁路总公司批准该趟班列按照技术直达进行组织,沿途不改编。

班列自太原启程,途经满洲里,再经贝加尔斯克,中途转为公路运输,货物抵达列索西比尔斯克后,需经过叶尼塞河运往矿区。由于货物过大过重,俄方客户计划采取卡车拉雪橇的方式,从冰面上拖运过河,并且要在3月30日冰河解冻之前,用冰面运输工具从俄罗斯最大河流叶尼塞河的冰面上通过,真可谓铁路、公路、水路三者俱全,最终抵达俄罗斯联邦俄罗斯克拉斯诺亚尔斯克边疆区的列索西比尔斯克站(Лесосибирск)。

望着班列准时驶出,马骏长吁一口气,如释重负。马骏告诉记者,此次货运,组织准备时间最短。算起来,从最初班列的准备工作到正式发车仅用了短短一个半月时间。其间经历了春节假期和春运过程,相关部门和企业在春节期间依然坚守岗位,在汽运、铁路都面临运力紧张的状态下,通过太原铁路局、山西省人民政府口岸办、太原海关、太原国检局等部门通力协作,最终保证班列准时、安全、高效地运行。

几个月后,人们会高兴地看到,这两台“太重牌”挖掘机将会在地处西伯利亚边缘地带、温度在-50℃的俄罗斯极地黄金公司矿区,一展“中国制造”的威力!

http://www.guancha.cn/Project/2017_02_16_394602.shtml
Can u Please translate this into english
 
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