Kazakhstan 'Dry Port' Key Hub for China's 'Belt and Road' Scheme

A four-hour drive from Almaty, the largest city in Kazakhstan, in the vast wasteland to the east leads to a new logistics station in the China-border city of Khorgos. 

The so-called dry port, developed by Kazakhstan Temir Zholy, the country's national railway company, has processed about 110,000 TEUs, or twenty-foot equivalent units, of containers since its launch in 2015. 

Because China and Kazakhstan use different track gauges, cargoes coming from China have to be reloaded to Kazakhstan trains before they continue their journey toward destinations in Europe. High cranes were busy transferring freight from one train to another. 

The freight trains leaving the port mostly carry auto parts and electronic devices, and usually take 10 days or so to travel to Germany. It used to take 40 days or so to ship freight from coastal Chinese cities to Europe via sea routes. The new train route has drastically cut the time to roughly half. Many freight owners who want speedy shipping opt for the train routes despite the higher costs than by ship. 

China is increasingly looking to Kazakhstan as a key hub for its "Belt and Road" routes. In May, China's Cosco Shipping, the world's No. 4 shipper, and the operating company of Lianyungang, a key port for China's freight corridor north of Shanghai, said they would jointly acquire a 49% stake in the inland port in Khorgos. The announcement was made on the sidelines of an international conference in Beijing of government leaders. 

Another location displaying Beijing's growing presence in the border city is the Khorgos International Center for Boundary Cooperation, a special free-trade zone in which people on both sides are allowed to cross the border without passports. 

On a recent day, tenants of the duty-free shopping mall on the Chinese side were crowded with shoppers from Kazakhstan. "Even with costs for driving all the way to here, it's cheaper to come here to shop," said a 58-year-old man from Almaty. 

Here, bed linens and towels sell for about half the prices as in Kazakhstan. The location was launched in 2012. The number of visitors to the center expanded five fold from 2013 to 2016, to 3.18 million. Affordable prices seem attractive enough to lure shoppers from even more distant locations, including Siberia and Kyrgyzstan.

Read full article at: Nikkei Asian Review

What is ALASH

ALASH is an online Suppliers database for oil and gas Operators in Kazakhstan

Read More

Business to Business

B2B

ALASH is a business-to-business portal that automatically manages the interaction between Supplier and Operator

Read More