The Silk Road is one of the oldest trading routes in the world. The network of routes between east and west used to connect China with India, Persia, the Arabian Peninsula and Europe. The cargo that was traded historically particularly involved silk, tea, spices and precious metals. The mammoth project known as the “Belt and Road Initiative” (BRI) involving China and about 60 other countries in Africa, Asia and Europe was launched in 2013: It entails expanding the infrastructure along the New Silk Road. In addition to revitalizing existing intercontinental trade and infrastructure networks, it has created numerous new ports, roads, railroad lines, logistics centers and trading places. Countless items of freight have been transported along overland and ocean routes since that time.
For a long time, the overland routes, known as the Silk Road Economic Belt, tended to be viewed as a niche market than a genuine alternative for transport freight from east to west and conversely. The railroad line, which runs from China as far as Central and Western Europe via Iran, Turkey, Pakistan and Belarus, was more of a backup for the ocean Silk Road, which stretches from the Chinese coast and South-East Asia as far as Europe via the Mideast and East Africa. As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the associated shortage of shipping and container availability, the Silk Road Economic Belt with its extremely well-developed rail freight services and its time savings has become an even greater integral part of operations.
The different possible routes along the Silk Road Economic Belt have now turned railroad services into a stable and reliable transport solution and they are maintaining this position by providing set departure times and reliable transit times. This is offering a significant increase in efficiency within supply chains. If customers from the automobile sector were the only ones using the Silk Road Economic Belt in the early days, more and more corporations from every conceivable sector, including manufacturers of machinery, electronics and chemicals, but also those producing fast-moving consumer goods, are now relying on this mode of transport.