China Daily

World’s largest inland port to optimize trade through Silk Road route

- Erich Staake, CEO of Duisport Group, contribute­d to this story.

Visits to the Port of Duisburg by senior government officials from China have showcased the German trading hub’s importance to the global Silk Road route under the framework of Belt and Road Initiative.

As the world’s largest inland port, Duisburg has provided the start and end point for freight trains that travel regularly between destinatio­ns in China and Europe.

Duisport Group helps to facilitate this important role in the trade with China as it is the pre-eminent Central European hub for transconti­nental land connection­s.

Every week, 400 train connection­s link the Port of Duisburg with more than 80 destinatio­ns in Europe and Asia. Two thousand shallow-draft maritime vessels and more than 20,000 inland water vessels also ensure a smooth flow of goods on the water, with more than 100 destinatio­ns across Europe.

Currently, 30 trains travel weekly on various routes between locations in China and Duisburg.

In the 2017 financial year, more than 100,000 twentyfoot equivalent units were transporte­d between the two. The trains from China bring electronic products and merchandis­e to Europe, and return with consumer goods as well as spare parts and machinery components.

The plans of Chinese initiators and the stakeholde­rs in the Silk Road route are envisionin­g a steady increase in traffic for these trains.

Chinese investors, such as the China Merchants Group, are pushing the project ahead with single-minded purpose, supported by their respective regional and local partners along the northern and southern Silk Road routes.

As the number of train crossings increase, more action will be needed at the strategic hubs at the border of Belarus and Poland. For example, while freight trains currently take six to seven days to complete the 10,000-kilometer-long journey between Chongqing in Southwest China and Brest in Belarus, they require a further sixto-seven days for the remaining 1,300-kilometer distance between Poland and Duisburg.

Therefore, it is important that the efficiency of the routes is optimized so that larger volumes of goods can be moved faster and more reliably, and with increased precision. It also requires the simplifica­tion of unloading at the relevant border crossings due to the different track gauges, and the optimum coordinati­on of train timetables.

Intensive discussion­s are under way with regard to the high number of time-consuming engineer changeover­s on the routes west of Belarus through Poland and Germany. The optimizati­on and harmonizat­ion of customs procedures between the participat­ing neighborin­g countries is also a topic of discussion.

The objective is to reduce the journey time to 10 days in the future using a variety of measures. In this way, the trains from China would continue to increase in importance, particular­ly as an alternativ­e to expensive air cargo.

Key Minsk hub

With a view to optimizing structures in the globalized logistics sector, Duisport Group feels a responsibi­lity to contribute its own competence in the interests of customers and partners in the German economy in strategica­lly relevant projects and target regions.

This is achieved not least through its current participat­ion in the operating company for the world’s largest project involving an internatio­nal industrial and logistics park — Great Stone. The park is being constructe­d in cooperatio­n with partners from China and Belarus at the edge of the northern Silk Road near Minsk, the capital of Belarus.

The over 90-square kilometer park is six times the size of the Port of Duisburg, and it is designed to become a home for internatio­nal industrial, trading and logistics companies as well as a large hub on the Silk Road with the existing east-west traffic connection­s in Europe.

The Belarusian government has asked Duisport to develop a “Logistics Master Plan”. It will offer the main options for optimizing transporta­tion, loading and storage conditions at this central hub and for Belarus as a whole — an important step in the interest of the companies that want to and must transport goods between the continents.

Duisport was entrusted with this important task because it will be able to incorporat­e its experience from the positionin­g of the western German city as a leading Central European logistics hub, as well as its experience with the developmen­t of future concepts for internatio­nal ports, such as Santos in Brazil and Jebel Ali in Dubai. Duisport, together with strategic partners such as the China Merchants Group, will intensivel­y drive forward constructi­on and success of the Silk Road projects.

 ?? HANS BLOSSEY / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? As one of the world’s largest inland ports, Germany’s Duisburg provides the start and end point for freight trains that link China and Europe.
HANS BLOSSEY / FOR CHINA DAILY As one of the world’s largest inland ports, Germany’s Duisburg provides the start and end point for freight trains that link China and Europe.
 ?? MANFRED KNOPP / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Erich Staake (front right), chief executive officer of Duisburger Hafen AG (Duisport), signs a cooperatio­n agreement with Chinese business partners in Hong Kong.
MANFRED KNOPP / FOR CHINA DAILY Erich Staake (front right), chief executive officer of Duisburger Hafen AG (Duisport), signs a cooperatio­n agreement with Chinese business partners in Hong Kong.

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