The train, carrying whisky, soft drinks, baby products and pharmaceuticals, will take 18 days to make the 12,000-km (7,500-mile) journey |
The
first-ever freight train from Britain to China started its mammoth journey on
Monday along a modern-day "Silk Road" trade route as Britain eyes new
opportunities after it leaves the European Union.
The
32-container train, around 600 metres (656 yards) long, left the vast London
Gateway container port laden with whisky, soft drinks and baby products, bound
for Yiwu on the east coast of China.
It was seen
off on its 18-day, 12,000-kilometre (7,500-mile) journey with a string quartet,
British and Chinese flags, and speeches voicing hope that it will cement a new
golden age of trade between the two countries as Brexit negotiations loom.
The first
train from China to Britain arrived on January 18, filled with clothes and
other retail goods, and Monday's departure was the first journey in the other
direction.
The rail
route is cheaper than air freight and faster than sea freight, offering
logistics companies a new middle option.
After the
last three containers were lifted onto the wagons, the driver gave a thumbs-up
and tooted his horn as he got the train rolling at the port in
Stanford-le-Hope, east of London.
"Restoring
the ancient Silk Road as a means by which China, north Europe and now the UK
can exchange goods is an important and exciting initiative," said Xubin
Feng, the chairman of Yiwu Timex Industrial Investment, which is co-running the
service.
"We
have great faith in the UK as an export nation and rail provides an excellent
alternative for moving large volumes of goods over long distances faster."
Nine
countries in 18 days
The train
will go through the Channel Tunnel before travelling across France, Belgium,
Germany, Poland, Belarus, Russia and Kazakhstan before heading into China.
The
containers, which also contain vitamins and pharmaceutical products, will be
taken off and put on different wagons as they leave Poland, as the former Soviet
Union countries use a wider rail gauge.
The
containers switch back to standard gauge wagons at the Chinese border, an
operation that typically takes around two hours.
Boosting
trade with China is a top priority for Britain as it leaves the EU and becomes
free to strike its own trade deals.
London was
hailing the first export train as part of its "global Britain" plan,
recalibrating its post-EU trading outlook.
Rupert
Soames, Prime Minister Theresa May's business ambassador for infrastructure and
transport, told AFP that the new route was "positive and timely".
"I
genuinely think that this is quite an historic day," said Soames, a
grandson of World War II prime minister Winston Churchill.
"In
some quarters now, globalisation is seen as a bad word. But here you see trade
in all its glory and possibilities."
China was
Britain's seventh-biggest export market last year, behind the United States,
Germany, France, the Netherlands, Ireland and Switzerland.
Some £13.5
billion of trade headed to China, according to UK government statistics, with
an average annual growth rate of 12.9 percent since 2006.
In terms of
imports, China is Britain's third-biggest market after Germany and the United
States, with trade worth £35.8 billion last year.
The freight
train is part of China's "One Belt, One Road" programme announced in
2013, reviving the ancient Silk Road trading routes to Europe.
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