The Herald (South Africa)

UK train brings back ‘Silk Road’ era

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THE first-ever freight train from Britain to China, laden with whisky, soft drinks and baby products, started its mammoth journey yesterday along a modern-day Silk Road trade route.

The 32-container train, around 600m long, left from the vast London Gateway container port on the River Thames estuary, bound for Yiwu on the Chinese east coast.

It was seen off on its 18-day, 12 000km journey with a string quartet, British and Chinese flags, and speeches voicing hope that it will cement a new golden age of trade between the two countries as the UK leaves the European Union.

The first train from China to Britain arrived on January 18, filled with clothes and other retail goods, and yesterday’s departure was the first journey in the other direction.

The rail route is cheaper than air freight and faster than sea freight, offering logistics companies a new middle option.

The driver gave a thumbs-up and tooted his horn as he got the wagons rolling at the port in Stanford-le-Hope, east of London.

The train will go through the Channel Tunnel, across France, Belgium, Germany, Poland, Belarus, Russia and Kazakhstan before heading into China.

The containers will be taken off and put on different wagons at the Belarus border, as the former Soviet Union countries use a wider rail gauge.

The containers switch back to standard gauge rails at the Chinese border.

“We are proud to be able to offer the first ever UK to China export train,” Yiwu Timex Industrial Investment chairman Xubin Feng said.

“Restoring the ancient Silk Road as a means by which China, north Europe and now the UK can exchange goods is an important and exciting initiative.

“This is the first export train and just the start of a regular direct service between the UK and China. We have great faith in the UK as an export nation and rail provides an excellent alternativ­e for moving large volumes of goods over long distances faster,” he said.

 ??  ?? CHINA BOUND: Two Chinese women wave flags at the official ceremony to mark the departure of the first UK to China export train, laden with containers of British goods, from London yesterday
CHINA BOUND: Two Chinese women wave flags at the official ceremony to mark the departure of the first UK to China export train, laden with containers of British goods, from London yesterday

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