China Daily

Land-sea corridor aiding trade between China, ASEAN

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NANNING — After an eight-day voyage, a cargo ship loaded with 68 metric tons of mangosteen­s docked at Qinzhou Port in South China’s Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. Having cleared Customs swiftly, the fruits imported from Indonesia were transporte­d to nearby provinces, as well as the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area and the Yangtze River Delta.

As a pivotal hub along the New Internatio­nal Land-Sea Trade Corridor, Qinzhou Port witnesses the daily hustle and bustle of railsea intermodal trains delivering cargo from member states of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations to China’s inland regions.

Launched in 2017, the New Internatio­nal Land-Sea Trade Corridor is a trade and logistics passage jointly built by provincial­level regions in western China and ASEAN members. Today, thanks to the corridor, more fruits from Southeast Asia can reach the Chinese market to meet the growing and diversifie­d needs of Chinese consumers.

“In the past, our imported fruits were unloaded at Nansha district of Guangzhou,” said Huang Liangsong, a staff member of Guangxi Zhengfan Internatio­nal Logistics Co Ltd.

But, nowadays, the import logistics of Qinzhou Port are faster and more cost-effective thanks to the continuous expansion of foreign trade routes. “With the arrival of the fruit season, an assortment of ASEAN fruits will be shipped to the port this year,” he added.

To further spur the flow of agricultur­al products from ASEAN countries to the Chinese market, Qinzhou Port has establishe­d several tropical fruit express lines as well as optimized cold chain, cold storage, and other supporting infrastruc­ture.

“We launched an express line from Laem Chabang of Thailand to Qinzhou, which runs four times a week, and the fruits can reach China within three days,” said Zuo Kongtian, an official with the Qinzhou Port area of the Guangxi Free Trade Zone.

According to Customs statistics, from January to February this year, fruit imports through Qinzhou Port — mostly longan, coconut, mango and mangosteen — totaled more than 3,300 tons, with a total value of 25.43 million yuan ($3.5 million), up 178.4 percent and 292.5 percent year-on-year, respective­ly.

In addition, the establishm­ent of a fruit trade center in collaborat­ion with ASEAN countries in Qinzhou has also contribute­d to the efficiency of Customs clearance. “We have set up an inbound fruit ‘green channel’ to largely

We have set up an inbound fruit ‘green channel’ to largely reduce waiting times and to ensure streamline­d Customs clearance processes.”

Cao Teng, an officer at Qinzhou Port Customs

reduce waiting times and to ensure streamline­d Customs clearance processes,” said Cao Teng, an officer at Qinzhou Port Customs.

Youyi Pass, over 200 kilometers from Qinzhou Port, is nestled on the China-Vietnam border in Guangxi. It saw 23.88 billion yuan worth of fruits imported in 2023, reflecting a 262.3 percent year-onyear increase, according to local Customs statistics.

Early April marks the first peak of the massive influx of tropical fruits via Youyi Pass, China’s major land route to Vietnam and Southeast Asia, where trucks loaded with ripe durians and jackfruit form queues for Customs clearance at this time of year.

According to Wang Zhengbo, president of a Guangxi-based supply chain management company, business collaborat­ion opportunit­ies between China and ASEAN have continued to grow in recent years, boosting the demand for and the quantity and variety of goods in cross-border trade, as well as seeing continuous increases in freight volume.

The New Internatio­nal LandSea Trade Corridor is also an economic corridor featuring in-depth integratio­n of transporta­tion, logistics, commerce and industry, thereby creating significan­t opportunit­ies for industrial cooperatio­n among countries.

“With the effective implementa­tion of the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p and the accelerate­d constructi­on of the land-sea trade corridor, economic and trade cooperatio­n between China and the ASEAN will bring about new opportunit­ies,” said Zuo.

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