According to a recent report by Fitch
Ratings, the capacity of this rail route has seen a significant expansion from
pre-crisis levels. Kong Weidong, head of the Zhengzhou branch of T.H.I. Group
(Shanghai) Ltd., a freight forwarder,
noted a remarkable increase in inquiries about the China-Europe freight train
service since January. “Since January, the number of inquiries has soared
by more than tenfold, and the actual export volume of goods has increased by
three to four times,” Kong stated.
The China-Europe cross-border rail
freight service typically takes between 12 and 18 days to reach European
destinations from Chinese cities, at a cost of approximately $6,500 per
container, as explained by Kong Weidong.
Kang Yingfeng, deputy general manager of
China Railway International Multimodal Transportation (CRIMT), the national
operator of the China-Europe freight train service and a subsidiary of China
Railway Container Transport, highlighted a
surge in interest in this service since the start of the year.
Kang Yingfeng noted significant interest from Chinese,
European, and American customers, along with major international logistics
firms like DHL and Kuehne+Nagel, in
the new route passing through transcontinental maritime routes to Georgia,
Turkey, and Central and Eastern Europe, as well as Southern Europe.
DHL, citing a report from The Financial Times, stated
that requests for goods transportation via the rail service to Russia had risen
by about 40 percent since container ships began diverting via longer routes in
December. This shift underscores the growing
reliance on alternative transportation modes amidst the evolving challenges in
global shipping.