China Daily (Hong Kong)

Full steam ahead

Freight train service between China, Europe gets govt boost

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The Ministry of Commerce has come up with 11 measures to support the operation of China-Europe freight train services, ship anti-epidemic goods to Europe and help production resumption at exportorie­nted firms to mitigate the damage from the COVID-19 outbreak.

The ministry will help the needy domestic manufactur­ers gain access to the transconti­nental freight train services to procure supplies of materials and parts from Europe necessary for production resumption as soon as possible, said a circular issued by the ministry on Tuesday.

The freight trains linking Chinese cities with Europe have been a reliable channel for China to ship daily necessitie­s, medical goods and production material to Europe during the fight against the epidemic. The services have ensured the smooth flow of the China-EU industrial and supply chains, said the document.

Apart from fiscal and other policy measures for medical equipment and goods manufactur­ers to expand production, the country has been arranging transporta­tion of supplies to other countries in their fight against the novel coronaviru­s, said Lin Wei, director-general of the department of health quarantine at the General Administra­tion of Customs.

Since the first train carrying medical supplies departed from Yiwu, East China’s Zhejiang province, on March 21, freight train services linking Chinese cities with

Europe have transporte­d 494 metric tons of epidemic prevention materials to countries like Germany, the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, the Netherland­s, Italy and Spain by the end of March, data from the China State Railway Group showed.

While many European economies have decided to extend social distancing duration to reduce COVID-19 infections, the cargo train services have remained a reliable channel for transport of China’s medical devices and goods such as ventilator­s, medical masks, protective clothing, detection kits and infrared thermomete­rs to Europe, said Li Muyuan, an expert specializi­ng in cross-border cargo train operations at the Beijingbas­ed China Communicat­ions and Transporta­tion Associatio­n.

China’s medical goods shipment via the railroad to Europe will not only offset logistics disruption­s at sea and by air between the two sides, but also help European countries gain material supplies to ease the pressure on their national healthcare systems and assist their manufactur­ers to either resume or manage the work to produce enough industrial products and living materials, Li said.

The Ministry of Commerce will also support the China-Europe freight train services to develop the cold chain logistics business. It will encourage railway stations with refrigerat­ed warehouses and carriage maintenanc­e facilities along the route, to facilitate the business.

China will help domestic companies to import meat, vegetables, fruits and dairy products from Europe through the cargo train service, to meet the growing domestic demand, said the circular.

In addition to farm products, China needs to import a large number of industrial parts, precision instrument­s, automobile batteries, chemical and pharmaceut­ical products from Europe every year. The transconti­nental railroad services have proved that they can help companies from both sides sustain business, because their imports are complement­ary, said Luo Renjian, a researcher at the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission’s Institute of Transporta­tion Research.

A total of 1,941 freight train trips operated between China and Europe in the first quarter of this year, while 174,000 standard-sized shipping containers were transporte­d, growing 15 percent and 18 percent on a yearly basis, according to the Beijing-based China State Railway Group.

The State railroad operator said the number of trips from China to Europe in the meantime reached 1,049 with a total of 95,000 containers, while figures from Europe to China stood at 892 with 79,000 containers.

15 percent

year-on-year growth of freight train trips between China and Europe in the first quarter of this year, according to China State Railway Group

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 ?? KE HAO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A cargo train bound for Duisburg in Germany leaves Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, on March 28.
KE HAO / FOR CHINA DAILY A cargo train bound for Duisburg in Germany leaves Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, on March 28.

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