China-Laos-Thailand round-trip freight train launched from China's Yunnan
KUNMING, Feb. 8 (Xinhua) -- A freight train loaded with 19 cold-chain containers packed with about 280 tonnes of fresh vegetables left Kunming, capital of southwest China's Yunnan Province, on Tuesday.
This was the first "China-Laos-Thailand" round-trip freight train. The train was scheduled to arrive in the Thai capital of Bangkok in 55 hours.
It will first stop at the Vientiane South Station in Laos for reloading, and then head for Bangkok via the Thai meter-gauge railway, which helps shorten the travel time by about one day compared to the previous route, while also reducing the transportation cost by more than 20 percent, said the China Railway Kunming Group Co., Ltd. The previous route was a combination of railway and highway.
When the train returns, it will carry seasonal fruits such as Thai longan and durian.
At present, cross-border freight transportation via the China-Laos Railway covers Laos, Thailand, Myanmar and other countries along the Belt and Road. The variety of transported goods has expanded from just more than 10 types when the railway was first opened to over 1,200 types currently. Total freight volume on this route now exceeds 2.5 million tonnes.
Photos
Related Stories
- Affectionate hugs warm return trips after Lantern Festival
- Slow train provides study room for student passengers in SW China's Chongqing
- Technicians carry out maintenance work for trains during Spring Festival travel rush in Urumqi, NW China
- Train tickets witness changing China
- Young maintenance worker checks bullet trains for Spring Festival travel rush
- Passenger train for snow and ice travel launched in NW China's Xinjiang
- Fuxing bullet trains to be put into operation in Jiangxi
- World's fastest maglev train, developed by China, on exhibition in Berlin
- Automated water-saving washing facility in NW China’s Gansu cleans whole train cars in only 10 minutes
- Chongqing, Chengdu record 20,000 China-Europe freight train trips
Copyright © 2023 People's Daily Online. All Rights Reserved.