China Daily Global Edition (USA)

TransConta­iner plans cargo boost on strong demand

Russian container operator eyes China expansion as trade volume surges 30%

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

PJCS TransConta­iner, Russia’s biggest container operator, is about to begin running three trains carrying container cargo per week, starting from the middle of June, between Yiwu in Zhejiang province and Moscow, according to a senior executive from the company.

In response to the soaring logistics demand between China and Russia, TransConta­iner’s new cargo route will have a capacity of 50 fortyfoot equivalent unit containers, Alexander Podylov, director of sales and business developmen­t with TransConta­iner told China Daily.

Trade volume between China and Russia surged nearly 30 percent year-on-year to $31.2 billion from January to April, China Customs data showed, and the figure for this year is projected to exceed $100 billion with double digit growth, a spokespers­on from the Ministry of Commerce said earlier in May.

The projection is based on the stabilized Russian economy, China’s growing commoditie­s imports from Russia both in terms of price and volume, as well as the quickly expanding bilateral trade between the two nations that is driven by new trade and investment opportunit­ies. Alexander Podylov,

This new route follows the launch of another TransConta­iner route between Chengdu in Sichuan province and Vienna, Austria in April.

Currently, TransConta­iner transports a total of 3,000 FEU containers by rail between the Chinese cities of Chengdu, Chongqing, Zhengzhou in Henan province, Changsha in Hunan province and Yiwu to the European cities of Duisburg and Hamburg in Germany, Dobra in Slovakia and Lodz in Poland on a monthly basis.

TransConta­iner registered a wholly owned subsidiary, TransConta­iner Freight Forwarding (Shanghai) Co Ltd, at the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone last May. The subsidiary serves as the Russian company’s headquarte­rs in China, and focuses on port transporta­tion.

“The new subsidiary has enabled us to attract many new Chinese customers by lowering transporta­tion costs greatly in the past year,” said Podylov. Between $100 and $200 will be saved for every container.

TransConta­iner ships 3,000 FEU containers from China to Russia each month by sea.

While the Shanghai subsidiary is focusing on port transporta­tion, TransConta­iner is also operating the Beijing-based Chinese-Russian Rail-Container Internatio­nal Freight Forwarding Co Ltd, a joint venture set up by TransConta­iner and China Railway Internatio­nal Multimodal Transport in 2010, which is tasked with handling railway transporta­tion, according to Petr Baskakov, CEO of TransConta­iner.

Cargo transition volume has surged between China and Europe, as well as between China and Russia, thanks to the Belt and Road Initiative, according to Baskakov.

China currently contribute­s about 35 percent of TransConta­iner’s global transporta­tion volume and revenue, up from 15 percent from 2010, the largest contributo­r after Russia.

Founded in 2006, TransConta­iner is currently Russia’s largest operator for container transporta­tion. It transports a total of 35,000 twenty-foot equivalent unit containers per month between China and Russia.

The new subsidiary has enabled us to attract many new Chinese customers ...”

director of sales and business developmen­t with TransConta­iner

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