The transport initiative known as the Middle Corridor is distinct from other types of organisations such as the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The Chinese President, Xi Jinping, launched the BRI as a global strategy for developing infrastructure as early as 2013. The BRI is also seeking to resurrect the Silk Road. A total of 149 countries have been included in the initiative so far. The Middle Corridor transport route, however, opens up much more wide-ranging opportunities in order to benefit from trade between China and Europe in economic terms. Specially established logistics centres and free trade zones in the ports of Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan, for example, are helping to develop and consolidate cooperation in the trans-Caspian region.
The Middle Corridor is in theory more economical and faster than the Northern Corridor. The trans-Caspian trade route between Europe and Asia is 2,000 kilometres shorter and provides more favourable climatic conditions for transporting goods. In addition, companies using the Middle Corridor benefit from the geostrategic advantage that the route does not pass through Russia. The trans-Caspian route therefore represents an efficient alternative to the trans-Siberian corridor.