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  January 18th, 2017 | Written by

BREAKING NEWS: First Freight Train From China Arrives in London

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  • DB Cargo responsible for the Duisburg–London section of first Freight Train from China to London.
  • 7,500-mile rail route from China to London took 18 days.
  • Freight train to London originated in Yiwu in the eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang.

The first container train travelling between China and the United Kingdom arrived today at DB Cargo UK’s London Eurohub terminal in Barking.

The train is operated by the InterRail Group, a multinational transport operator headquartered in Switzerland, on behalf of China Railway subsidiary CRIMT. Various freight railways handled traction along the 7,500-mile route. DB Cargo was responsible for the section from Duisburg to London via the Channel Tunnel.

The train originated in Yiwu in the eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang. It reached London in around 18 days, making it twice as fast as transport by sea. The train was loaded primarily with textiles and other consumer goods. The 34-foot by 40-foot containers required specifically for the UK were loaded on to Deutsche Bahn’s container platforms at the Duisburg container terminal, which are specially approved for the Channel Tunnel.

The UK is just the latest destination added to the China–Europe rail link. The train is initially being operated as a test train. London is one more international connection for the InterRail Group, along with Duisburg, Madrid, Afghanistan, and Riga, on the One Belt, One Road corridor, an initiative of the Chinese government.

DB has collaborated with partners since 2011 to operate weekly container trains on the world’s longest rail line, which connects, among other cities, Duisburg and Hamburg to Wuhan, Chongqing, and Harbin, and as of mid-2016, Hamburg to the Chinese province of Hefei. A record number of containers, around 40,000, were transported by train along the legendary Silk Road in 2016. The volume is expected to increase to some 100,000 containers by 2020.

The 6,000 to 7,500-mile journeys usually take 12 to 16 days and require containers to be unloaded and reloaded multiple times due to changes of track gauge. The service is used in particular by customers with time-sensitive commodities, including special promotional clothing items, and capital-intensive goods, such as automotive parts and electronics.