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The Great Game Changer: Belt and Road Intiative (BRI; OBOR)

China conducts joint military exercises with Russia, US, Australia: Defense Ministry
(CRI Online) August 26, 2016

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A series of joint military exercises among Chinese, Russian, U.S. and Australian troops is getting underway.

Spokesperosn Wu Qian says Chinese ground forces are teaming up with US and Australian troops for training sessions in Australia's rugged northern regions.

"Based on our agreement with the U.S. and Australian defense departments, China, the US and Australia are holding the joint 'Exercise Kowari 2016' that includes field survival training in Darwin, Australia from Aug. 24 to Sept. 11."

On top of this, the Chinese Defense Ministry says Chinese and Australian ground forces will also conduct their own, separate exercies - dubbed "Panda-Kangaroo 2016" from September 14th to the 23rd.

Those exercies, which will take place near Sydney, Australia, will include canoeing and downhill climbing drills.

The Chinese side says both sessions in Australia will be a good opportunity for Chinese ground forces to interact with their counterparts from Australia and the United States, and will also improve their overall training.

Meanwhile, the Defense Ministry's Wu Qian says preparation work is also underway for a planned joint naval exercise with Russia.

"China and Russia have held their third round of negotiation over the 'Joint Sea 2016' maritime exercise in Zhanjiang City from Aug. 16 to 21, exchanging views on the exercise plan and arrangements for communication and logistic supports. They have reached wide consensus and have also inspected the relevant sites and facilities to be involved in the exercises. "

An exact date as to when the joint naval exercises with the Russian navy have not been laid out.

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Some of our Communist neighbours, who can't wait seeing China and US start WWIII no later than tomorrow early morning because the US cares so much for the Communists to hold all the islands it has stolen, should not be depressed :(.

@kecho .
 
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Singapore 'can help One Belt, One Road project reach potential'

Singapore can play a key role in helping China's ambitious One Belt, One Road (OBOR) initiative reach its full potential, said Minister in the Prime Minister's Office Chan Chun Sing yesterday.

He told a forum that while the initiative was inspired by the ancient overland and maritime trade routes, it will need to incorporate other dimensions of connectivity to really flourish - and this is where Singapore can help.

"To me, whether it's One Belt, One Road, or the Maritime Silk Road, it goes beyond the two dimensions of conventional land and sea connectivity. It will be what I call a five-dimensional connectivity - that's land, sea, air, data and finance," he said.

The joint Singaporean and Chinese government project, the Chongqing Connectivity Initiative, could be where Singapore adds value, he said. The initiative has identified four areas for bilateral collaboration: finance, aviation, transport and logistics, and infocommunications technology. Mr Chan said it aims to create a "dumb-bell effect", namely, to catalyse the development of the two ends of the "dumb-bell" - in Chongqing and in Singapore.

"It's not just about foreign direct investment (FDI) flowing from Singapore to China. It's about how China... will also want to push its FDI into the world for... more sustainable returns for its ageing population," said Mr Chan, who was speaking to about 500 participants at the second Singapore Regional Business Forum held at The Ritz-Carlton.


"China can use Singapore as a platform to reach out to South-east Asia and the rest of the world.

"Singapore, on the other end of the dumb-bell, can bring in services to catalyse the development of China's western region. The creation of this dumb-bell effect will allow Singapore to play a role that is in accordance with China's needs."

In a separate panel, banking leaders elaborated on Singapore's role in the OBOR initiative as an infrastructure financing hub. Panellists said Singapore could play a key role in infrastructure finance for the region, a process that is well under way with banking experts in that field relocating here. But the private sector here faces several challenges in fighting for a slice of the cake.

OCBC Bank chief executive Samuel Tsien pointed to tough competition from the public sector due to the proliferation of financing via the Silk Road Fund, as well as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

Recounting his experience meeting a China Development Bank official, Mr Tsien said he had asked why no commercial banks were involved in the Jakarta-Bandung high-speed railway project. He was told that the bank had too much money and not enough projects. "As commercial banks, we really need to partner the policy banks in order to find opportunities that we cannot identify alone," he said.

DBS Bank head of project finance Lim Wee Seng said there was no lack of funds for the huge sums needed for infrastructure in the region, but that there was a lack of "bankable projects" due to institutional capacity. He urged the private sector to work with governments to develop more projects.

"This could be a potential area for Singapore and China to collaborate in," he said, adding that Singapore could bring in its urban-planning skills, and China its strengths in construction and sources of financing.

http://www.straitstimes.com/business/singapore-can-help-one-belt-one-road-project-reach-potential
 
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Singapore 'can help One Belt, One Road project reach potential'

Singapore can play a key role in helping China's ambitious One Belt, One Road (OBOR) initiative reach its full potential, said Minister in the Prime Minister's Office Chan Chun Sing yesterday.

He told a forum that while the initiative was inspired by the ancient overland and maritime trade routes, it will need to incorporate other dimensions of connectivity to really flourish - and this is where Singapore can help.

"To me, whether it's One Belt, One Road, or the Maritime Silk Road, it goes beyond the two dimensions of conventional land and sea connectivity. It will be what I call a five-dimensional connectivity - that's land, sea, air, data and finance," he said.

The joint Singaporean and Chinese government project, the Chongqing Connectivity Initiative, could be where Singapore adds value, he said. The initiative has identified four areas for bilateral collaboration: finance, aviation, transport and logistics, and infocommunications technology. Mr Chan said it aims to create a "dumb-bell effect", namely, to catalyse the development of the two ends of the "dumb-bell" - in Chongqing and in Singapore.

"It's not just about foreign direct investment (FDI) flowing from Singapore to China. It's about how China... will also want to push its FDI into the world for... more sustainable returns for its ageing population," said Mr Chan, who was speaking to about 500 participants at the second Singapore Regional Business Forum held at The Ritz-Carlton.


"China can use Singapore as a platform to reach out to South-east Asia and the rest of the world.

"Singapore, on the other end of the dumb-bell, can bring in services to catalyse the development of China's western region. The creation of this dumb-bell effect will allow Singapore to play a role that is in accordance with China's needs."

In a separate panel, banking leaders elaborated on Singapore's role in the OBOR initiative as an infrastructure financing hub. Panellists said Singapore could play a key role in infrastructure finance for the region, a process that is well under way with banking experts in that field relocating here. But the private sector here faces several challenges in fighting for a slice of the cake.

OCBC Bank chief executive Samuel Tsien pointed to tough competition from the public sector due to the proliferation of financing via the Silk Road Fund, as well as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

Recounting his experience meeting a China Development Bank official, Mr Tsien said he had asked why no commercial banks were involved in the Jakarta-Bandung high-speed railway project. He was told that the bank had too much money and not enough projects. "As commercial banks, we really need to partner the policy banks in order to find opportunities that we cannot identify alone," he said.

DBS Bank head of project finance Lim Wee Seng said there was no lack of funds for the huge sums needed for infrastructure in the region, but that there was a lack of "bankable projects" due to institutional capacity. He urged the private sector to work with governments to develop more projects.

"This could be a potential area for Singapore and China to collaborate in," he said, adding that Singapore could bring in its urban-planning skills, and China its strengths in construction and sources of financing.

http://www.straitstimes.com/business/singapore-can-help-one-belt-one-road-project-reach-potential

I have recently read that, among the Belt and Road countries (60+), Singapore is the fastest in terms of bureaucratic efficiency and trade facilitation.

I guess China's Hong Kong and regional neighbor Singapore will benefit immensely from the increased trade flow in the region thanks to the Belt and Road, especially the maritime leg.
 
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Central Asia freight train service starts
Source:Xinhua Published: 2016/8/25 22:57:07

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The first Central Asia cargo train departs from Nantong, east China's Jiangsu Province, Aug. 25, 2016. The cargo train left Nantong on Thursday for Afghanistan's Hairatan, marking the start of Central Asia freight train service. (Xinhua/Ji Chunpeng)


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Customs staff workers pass by the first Central Asia cargo train before it leaves Nantong, east China's Jiangsu Province, Aug. 25, 2016. The cargo train left Nantong on Thursday for Afghanistan's Hairatan, marking the start of Central Asia freight train service. (Xinhua/Ji Chunpeng)


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A railway worker gets on the first Central Asia cargo train in Nantong, east China's Jiangsu Province, Aug. 25, 2016. The cargo train left Nantong on Thursday for Afghanistan's Hairatan, marking the start of Central Asia freight train service. (Xinhua/Ji Chunpeng)
 
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Belt and Road Initiative gives YTO chance for further development I
(Xinhua) 12:31, August 28, 2016


(Left) File photo taken in 1958 shows the first batch of "Dongfanghong" tractors produced by Luoyang First Tractor Factory in Luoyang, central China's Henan Province.

(Right)"Dongfanghong" tractors park in the factory in Luoyang, central China's Henan Province, Aug. 16, 2016. (The file photo was taken by Tang Maolin and right photo was taken by Zhu Xiang)
In 1958, China's first caterpillar tractor "Dongfanghong" was manufactured in Luoyang Tractor Factory, marking the first step of China's tractor industry. In the past six decades, the factory which renamed as YTO Group Corporation has produced 3.31 million tractors and 2.45 million power machines. The Belt and Road Initiative gives YTO an opportunity to further development. In the recent years, YTO built several factories in Serbia, South Africa, Poland and other countries. In 2011, the French company McCormick, an old tractor factory founded in 1950s, was acquired by YTO. In 2015, YTO was listed on the first six Chinese companies settled in the China-Belarus Industrial Park. After experiencing the development process from technology import to independent research and development, YTO enhanced its competitiveness and more "Dongfanghong" tractors would show in the fields at home and abroad.


Photo taken in 1962 (Upper) shows "Dongfanghong" tractors on a train in China and photo taken in Dec. 1961 (Lower) shows "Dongfanghong" tractors shipping to Albania in Shanghai.

In 1958, China's first caterpillar tractor "Dongfanghong" was manufactured in Luoyang Tractor Factory, marking the first step of China's tractor industry. In the past six decades, the factory which renamed as YTO Group Corporation has produced 3.31 million tractors and 2.45 million power machines. The Belt and Road Initiative gives YTO an opportunity to further development. In the recent years, YTO built several factories in Serbia, South Africa, Poland and other countries. In 2011, the French company McCormick, an old tractor factory founded in 1950s, was acquired by YTO. In 2015, YTO was listed on the first six Chinese companies settled in the China-Belarus Industrial Park. After experiencing the development process from technology import to independent research and development, YTO enhanced its competitiveness and more "Dongfanghong" tractors would show in the fields at home and abroad.


A customs officer checks a "Dongfanghong" tractor in Luoyang, central China's Henan Province, July 26, 2013.

In 1958, China's first caterpillar tractor "Dongfanghong" was manufactured in Luoyang Tractor Factory, marking the first step of China's tractor industry. In the past six decades, the factory which renamed as YTO Group Corporation has produced 3.31 million tractors and 2.45 million power machines. The Belt and Road Initiative gives YTO an opportunity to further development. In the recent years, YTO built several factories in Serbia, South Africa, Poland and other countries. In 2011, the French company McCormick, an old tractor factory founded in 1950s, was acquired by YTO. In 2015, YTO was listed on the first six Chinese companies settled in the China-Belarus Industrial Park. After experiencing the development process from technology import to independent research and development, YTO enhanced its competitiveness and more "Dongfanghong" tractors would show in the fields at home and abroad.


(Upper) Farmers try a "Dongfanghong" tractor in Ecuador, June 25, 2008. (Lower)"Dongfanghong" tractors are seen at a handover ceremony of aid tractors in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, July 29, 2011.

In 1958, China's first caterpillar tractor "Dongfanghong" was manufactured in Luoyang Tractor Factory, marking the first step of China's tractor industry. In the past six decades, the factory which renamed as YTO Group Corporation has produced 3.31 million tractors and 2.45 million power machines. The Belt and Road Initiative gives YTO an opportunity to further development. In the recent years, YTO built several factories in Serbia, South Africa, Poland and other countries. In 2011, the French company McCormick, an old tractor factory founded in 1950s, was acquired by YTO. In 2015, YTO was listed on the first six Chinese companies settled in the China-Belarus Industrial Park. After experiencing the development process from technology import to independent research and development, YTO enhanced its competitiveness and more "Dongfanghong" tractors would show in the fields at home and abroad.

Belt and Road Initiative gives YTO chance for further development II


Photo taken on Oct. 16, 2009 (Upper) shows a "Dongfanghong" tractor working in fields in Malaysia and photo taken on June 1995 (Lower) shows people driving a "Dongfanghong" tractor in Cote d'Ivoire.
In 1958, China's first caterpillar tractor "Dongfanghong" was manufactured in Luoyang Tractor Factory, marking the first step of China's tractor industry. In the past six decades, the factory which renamed as YTO Group Corporation has produced 3.31 million tractors and 2.45 million power machines. The Belt and Road Initiative gives YTO an opportunity to further development. In the recent years, YTO built several factories in Serbia, South Africa, Poland and other countries. In 2011, the French company McCormick, an old tractor factory founded in 1950s, was acquired by YTO. In 2015, YTO was listed on the first six Chinese companies settled in the China-Belarus Industrial Park. After experiencing the development process from technology import to independent research and development, YTO enhanced its competitiveness and more "Dongfanghong" tractors would show in the fields at home and abroad.

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"Dongfanghong" tractors, to be shipped to Cuba, park at a port in Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, July 16, 2015.

In 1958, China's first caterpillar tractor "Dongfanghong" was manufactured in Luoyang Tractor Factory, marking the first step of China's tractor industry. In the past six decades, the factory which renamed as YTO Group Corporation has produced 3.31 million tractors and 2.45 million power machines. The Belt and Road Initiative gives YTO an opportunity to further development. In the recent years, YTO built several factories in Serbia, South Africa, Poland and other countries. In 2011, the French company McCormick, an old tractor factory founded in 1950s, was acquired by YTO. In 2015, YTO was listed on the first six Chinese companies settled in the China-Belarus Industrial Park. After experiencing the development process from technology import to independent research and development, YTO enhanced its competitiveness and more "Dongfanghong" tractors would show in the fields at home and abroad.
 
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Columnists - Behind The Headlines
Sunday, 28 August 2016

Mixing borders with trade
BY BUNN NAGARA

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Connecting the world: China’s ambitious New Silk Road project presents vast opportunities to many countries.


As China reprises its role in history as the world’s trade leader, some kinks in its foreign relations still need to be ironed out.

AMONG once-fashionable terms, “borderless world” must be one of the least relevant today.

Borders are at least as important now as they had ever been. Border disputes and conflicts over territory are still very much in vogue.

Distance and proximity also matter. Goods and people still have to be transported over land and sea.

More than two millennia ago, traders traversing vast distances along the Silk Road contributed to the growth of Asian and European civilisations.

China, at the very heart of this economic artery, thrived as the “Middle Kingdom.” It was both conduit and catalyst for the rise of Asia and Europe as well as close relations between them.

Internally, ancient China was also capable of feats like the Great Wall, one of the Wonders of the World and among history’s most massive infrastructure projects.

Although the iconic wall as barrier may seem to contradict the Silk Road that connected peoples, one of the Great Wall’s purposes was to secure the Silk Road and its legitimate travellers from bandits.

Trade was paramount and still is. Colossal infrastructure was needed to support extensive trade, and continues to be.

In 2013, China launched the “One Belt, One Road” mega-project or OBOR, involving a New Silk Road to reconnect East Asia with western Europe across the vast Eurasian land mass.

This will incorporate the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st-century Maritime Silk Road, comprising six component economic corridors: China-Mongolia- Russia, China-Indochina Peninsula, Bangladesh-China-India- Myanmar, China-Pakistan, China-Central Asia-West Asia, and the New Eurasia Land Bridge.

Obor will also link to such entities as the Yangtze River Economic Belt and the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) for larger synergies.

Covering 65 countries and territories in Asia, Africa and Europe, Obor will reportedly impact on some 4.4 billion people, or 60% of the world’s population.

It will comprise nearly 120 projects involving some US$225bil (RM903bil) at current value. Obor will be the most massive infrastructure project in the world. Its costs and benefits will also be of a comparable scale.

The Silk Road Economic Belt alone will link Xian to the Tajik capital Dushanbe, then further westward to Moscow, then Rotterdam and Venice.

Further south, the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road will link Fuzhou across the South China Sea to Jakarta, up the Malacca Straits to Colombo, Kolkata, then Nairobi, Athens and Venice.

The various component economic corridors link a whole host of more towns, cities and communities. Scores of ports, airports, highway networks and high-speed rail links will be constructed or upgraded.

In South-East Asia, Obor would accommodate and complement Asean’s efforts at building regional connectivity.

As it was with the old Silk Road some 2,000 years ago, Obor’s main themes and motivations are economic: to promote trade and investment between major points on much of the world map.

There are other motivations, of course. As it was before, cultural exchanges will be encouraged and developed.

But some countries still wary of China’s growth see a strategic angle implicit in Obor’s geopolitical configuration.

At a recent conference in Ulaanbaatar, a Japanese participant acknowledged Obor’s benefits but also expressed concern about its strategic implications. But nobody else was listening.

Most participants were content with awaiting the opportunities that Obor was expected to deliver.

Where there were concerns, they were about other issues.

The Europeans were worried about the risk of environmental degradation that construction of the major infrastructure projects of the various corridors could entail.

When pressed on the strategic issues, Europeans in general would murmur about how the mega-project should be more of a collective effort with equitably shared benefits.

Obor’s clear strategic implication is that China will be the country at its core. Is that enough to be of any legitimate concern?

Nobody has an alternative plan or interpretation of Obor, much less “a better idea.” Any circumspection has also not developed beyond some doubts that could be dispelled with more information.

That indicates one of Obor’s weaknesses: not enough detailed information has been made available beyond the platitudes and feel-good gestures.

Requests for more details or anything like a blueprint typically result in getting a copy of Vision and Actions on Jointly Building Silk Road Economic Belt and 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road, a policy document issued by China’s Foreign Ministry.

Although this is the nearest thing to a blueprint for Obor, it is still lacking in details.

This situation suggests that Beijing is satisfied with only providing the broad themes of the big picture, leaving provisional authorities, the private sector and other interests to fill in the blanks.

By the same token, the scores of countries and territories outside China covered by Obor should also act to provide the details that are still missing. This would help ensure that the costs and benefits which accrue would be more equitable and acceptable.

It is not only common sense but also smart forward planning that has to begin now. It makes no sense to languish in apathy and complaint mode, doubting the benefits of Obor by doing nothing to co-design it.

Funding is a key issue, particularly given the enormous costs involved, so the likely financial resources need to be examined carefully.

Even a cash-rich China cannot afford to fund Obor entirely on its own, despite its deep pockets. Besides multilateral projects like Obor, China also has financial commitments in other countries on a bilateral basis.

Some of the necessary resources at least will have to come from other countries. This issue has been contributing to doubts that some countries still have about acceding to Obor.

When earlier reports suggested that the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) would be instrumental in financing Obor, Beijing baulked.

Perhaps, it had quietly planned for the AIIB to finance projects in other regions of the world. Or perhaps it did not want to spook countries with no place in Obor that were still mulling over whether to join the AIIB.

Alternatively, China may have other financial institutions in mind for Obor – but what are they?

One possibility is the New Development Bank, or BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) bank.

But that would be an unlikely or limited source, since Obor concerns only three of the five countries. More specifically, Obor’s designated financial institution is the state-owned Silk Road Infrastructure Fund. But this is also of limited utility, since at its launch in 2014, Beijing allocated only US$40bil (RM160bil), or less than 18% of Obor’s projected costs.

Another challenge facing Obor on the ground, or in the water, is China’s assertive posture over disputed territory in the South China Sea. This is the precise location of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, which requires close collaboration with other countries including rival claimant states.

The Philippines had taken its dispute with China to the Permanent Court of Arbitration at the Hague, which ruled against China’s claims. But with a new, more conciliatory government in Manila, the prospect for negotiations has improved substantially.

The hope of better regional relations, and of Obor in South-East Asia, now hinges on the progress of relations between China and claimant countries like the Philippines.

Evidently, borders, territory and sovereignty continue to be as significant today as trade and development.

Bunn Nagara is a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Strategic and International Studies (ISIS) Malaysia.
 
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First freight train linking Yiwu to Afghanistan departs
Xinhua, August 29, 2016

The eastern Chinese city of Yiwu, home to the world's leading small commodities market, saw its first freight train leave for Afghanistan on Sunday.

It is the fifth cargo train route linking Yiwu to Europe or Asia. Cargo train routes already in service connect Yiwu with countries including Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Spain, Iran, and Russia.

The train, hauling 100 containers of goods worth more than US$4 million, will arrive at Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan via Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. A single trip is 7,500 km and takes 15 days, half the time needed for maritime transportation. The service is expected to run weekly by the end of this year.

The northern Afghanistan city of Mazar-i-Sharif is a key commercial center near the border with Uzbekistan. It also serves as a logistics hub for the entire Middle East. The new freight route is expected to help upgrade trade cooperation between China and the region.

Trade between Yiwu and Afghanistan amounted to US$20.2 million in 2015, representing year-on-year growth of 2,284.5 percent. The total import-export volume reached US$18.3 million during the first half of this year, up by 4,683 percent compared with the same period last year, according to the local bureau of commerce.

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Guangzhou launches China-Europe cargo train service to Russia

Xinhua, August 28, 2016

A cargo train left south China's Guangzhou City Sunday for Vorsino, Kaluzhskaya Oblast in Russia.

It is the latest freight train route China has launched to boost trade ties along the ancient Silk Road.

The train will travel 11,500 km over 14 days before reaching its destination. Its cargo includes garments, shoes, hats, cloth, lamps and lanterns, electrical appliances, and electronics.

Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, has traditionally depended more on maritime freight services. The new cargo train service saves 30 days compared with shipping services, and it costs just a fifth of the price for air transportation.

Kaluzhskaya Oblast has set up a major logistics center in the Vorsino industrial park to handle 150,000 to 350,000 containers a year, according to Russian media reports.

Currently, 26 cities in China offer China-Europe or China-Asia freight train services.
 
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First freight train linking Yiwu to Afghanistan departs
Xinhua, August 29, 2016

The eastern Chinese city of Yiwu, home to the world's leading small commodities market, saw its first freight train leave for Afghanistan on Sunday.

It is the fifth cargo train route linking Yiwu to Europe or Asia. Cargo train routes already in service connect Yiwu with countries including Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Spain, Iran, and Russia.

The train, hauling 100 containers of goods worth more than US$4 million, will arrive at Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan via Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. A single trip is 7,500 km and takes 15 days, half the time needed for maritime transportation. The service is expected to run weekly by the end of this year.

The northern Afghanistan city of Mazar-i-Sharif is a key commercial center near the border with Uzbekistan. It also serves as a logistics hub for the entire Middle East. The new freight route is expected to help upgrade trade cooperation between China and the region.

Trade between Yiwu and Afghanistan amounted to US$20.2 million in 2015, representing year-on-year growth of 2,284.5 percent. The total import-export volume reached US$18.3 million during the first half of this year, up by 4,683 percent compared with the same period last year, according to the local bureau of commerce.

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Guangzhou launches China-Europe cargo train service to Russia

Xinhua, August 28, 2016

A cargo train left south China's Guangzhou City Sunday for Vorsino, Kaluzhskaya Oblast in Russia.

It is the latest freight train route China has launched to boost trade ties along the ancient Silk Road.

The train will travel 11,500 km over 14 days before reaching its destination. Its cargo includes garments, shoes, hats, cloth, lamps and lanterns, electrical appliances, and electronics.

Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, has traditionally depended more on maritime freight services. The new cargo train service saves 30 days compared with shipping services, and it costs just a fifth of the price for air transportation.

Kaluzhskaya Oblast has set up a major logistics center in the Vorsino industrial park to handle 150,000 to 350,000 containers a year, according to Russian media reports.

Currently, 26 cities in China offer China-Europe or China-Asia freight train services.
Picture of the first freight train to Afghanistan.

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The launching ceremony of the first freight train from Yiwu to Afghanistan in Yiwu, east China's Zhejiang Province, Aug. 28, 2016. [Photo/Xinhua]

The eastern Chinese city of Yiwu, home to the world's leading small commodities market, saw its first freight train leave for Afghanistan on Sunday. The train, hauling 100 containers of goods worth more than 4 million U.S. dollars, will arrive at Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan via Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. (Xinhua/Gong Xianming)
 
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Picture of the first freight train to Afghanistan.

View attachment 329772
The launching ceremony of the first freight train from Yiwu to Afghanistan in Yiwu, east China's Zhejiang Province, Aug. 28, 2016. [Photo/Xinhua]

The eastern Chinese city of Yiwu, home to the world's leading small commodities market, saw its first freight train leave for Afghanistan on Sunday. The train, hauling 100 containers of goods worth more than 4 million U.S. dollars, will arrive at Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan via Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. (Xinhua/Gong Xianming)


That's amazing.

OBOR is...

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Trade between Yiwu and Afghanistan amounted to US$20.2 million in 2015, representing year-on-year growth of 2,284.5 percent. The total import-export volume reached US$18.3 million during the first half of this year, up by 4,683 percent compared with the same period last year, according to the local bureau of commerce.

Apparently, the trade starts from a very low base. But, still, significant development pace. This is especially so if you consider the non-progressive and perhaps long-dead US-led Silk Road Initiative.
 
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More news on the Guangzhou - Russia freight train service.
The OBOR is slowly taking shape.


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Guangzhou launches China-Europe cargo train service to Russia
(CRI Online) 08:40, August 29, 2016

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China-Europe cargo train service to Russia is launched on August 28, 2016. [Photo: Chinanews.com]

China has launched a new freight train route to boost trade along the ancient Silk Road.

The latest route links south China's Guangzhou City with Vorsino, Kaluzhskaya Oblast in Russia.

The train will travel 11,500 km over 14 days before reaching its destination.

The new train service saves 30 days compared with shipping services, and only costs a fifth of the price of air transportation.

So far, 26 cities in China have launched cargo train routes towards Europe and landlocked Asian regions.
 
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I am starting a thread that touches both China and Russia.
This is the first one post.


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Eco-friendly Russian food products can satisfy China’s growing appetite
August 24, 2016 OLEG REMYGA, SPECIAL TO RBTH

With a growing Chinese middle class demanding high quality and eco-friendly food products, Russian agricultural exporters have a great opportunity to tap into this niche market.

Until the mid-1980s, the Soviet Union was among the world leaders in the production of wheat, rye, sugar beet, potatoes, milk and livestock. Russia’s agricultural industry then went into the doldrums and took over two and a half decades to recover.

It received a major boost in 2014 when Russia introduced sanctions on food products from the West, and initiated an import substitution-focused policy.

The price competitiveness of Russian agricultural products has primarily increased over the last two years due to the sharp devaluation of the ruble.

Bumper harvests in the last two years have led to a surplus of agricultural produce in Russia and an opportunity to increase large-scale exports to China, the world’s largest consumer of food.

In 2015, the country's population consumed 120 million tons of wheat (almost as much as the European Union), 150 million tons of rice (a third of global consumption), and 57 million tons of pork (first place).

Simultaneously, as the population in China is growing, the total arable land is decreasing, while, according to unofficial data, the level of urbanization has reached 55 percent.

As the demand for agricultural products is expanding, the country's production capacity is declining. China's leadership, realizing that this situation calls into question the food security of the country, announced at the end of 2015 that as part of the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-2020) the country would rely more on food imports. Medium and long-term export prospects look very bright for Russian agricultural producers.

Problems to face

At the same time, the ongoing cooperation is not free from problems. The first hurdle that came in the way of Russian agricultural producers was the bureaucratic procedure in China to attain phytosanitary certification.

Chinese regulators are very cautious about allowing foreign businesses access to their agricultural market. The negotiations on the admission of Russian meat to China's market took more than a year.

Russian meat products will most likely enter the Chinese market by the end of 2016. The Russian regions bordering China, especially in the Far East will have a comparative advantage in the export of agricultural products to China. In turn, the development of infrastructure of the Russian Far East will only spur the development of the agricultural sector.

The institutional framework for this trend is already being formed. The recently established Russian-Chinese Agricultural Development Fund aims to develop agricultural infrastructure projects in the Amur Region, the Jewish Autonomous Region, and Primorye Territory. The fund plans to invest 200 billion rubles ($3 billion) in these regions that are in the Far East.

Russian agricultural products can compete most effectively in certain unoccupied niches of the Chinese market. In dollar terms, average wages are already higher in China than in Russia. Simultaneously, the growing middle class has begun to demand higher-quality foods.

However, Chinese manufacturers often sacrifice the quality of manufactured food products for the sake of higher levels of productivity. Chinese consumers tend to consider Russian foods as environmentally friendly products grown on the vast expanses of their “northern neighbor.”

The niche market of ecologically friendly products has not yet been tapped by local manufacturers. So, despite all the complexities at the moment, the medium and long-term prospects for Russian agricultural exports look very bright. It is no coincidence that in the first half of 2016, China became the largest importer of Russian agricultural products.

Oleg Remyga is Head of China Studies in Moscow School of Management SKOLKOVO
 
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A lot of things are happening between China and Russia.

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China, Russia eye crossings on border island
China Daily, August 8, 2016

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China and Russia are considering setting up land crossings connecting through Heixiazi Island, which is jointly owned by the two countries.

Zhou Hong, director of the Heixiazi Island Development and Management Committee, said Russia has suggested cross-border checkpoints. These would allow eight-seater or smaller cars to travel between Khabarovsk, one of the largest cities in Russia's Far East, and Fuyuan in Heilongjiang province, the most easterly town in China.

Zhou said that once the checkpoints are set up, they could be the largest on the Sino-Russian border and handle a projected annual passenger flow of more than 2 million.

The 335-square-kilometer island at the confluence of the Heilongjiang and Wusuli rivers, known as the Amur and Ussuri rivers in Russia, will play a vital role in boosting the local economy both as a road link and as a tourist destination.

The island, about one-third the size of Hong Kong, was the last border sticking point between China and Russia until the two countries agreed to each taking half of it.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said after border markers were unveiled on the island in 2008, "The experience of China and Russia in resolving border disputes left by historical factors proves that peaceful dialogue and fair and reasonable consultation on an equal basis are effective."

However, considerable speculation arose over the use of the island-ranging from a tourist attraction to free trade zone to property development-until President Xi Jinping visited it in May and made an appeal for environmental protection.

Viewing the island and the rivers from a pagoda, he said ecological protection should be the priority for the island, especially as infrastructure would need to be built to encourage more tourists to visit the area, Xinhua News Agency reported.

In a written statement to China Daily on July 26, the National Development and Reform Commission, China's top economic planning agency, outlined a three-pronged policy for the island's "protective development".

It called for it to be turned into a "model zone for China-Russia cooperation", while emphasizing ecological protection and moderate tourism growth for the island.

Zhou said that since Xi's visit, local strategies have shifted to focus on ecological infrastructure construction, such as roads on the island.

Tourists are being asked to leave their cars behind and to take electric carts to get around the island. It boasts the recently built pagoda, abandoned Russian barracks and wetland areas. Visitors can also see a Russian Orthodox church, patrol boats and more wetland on the Russian side.

To further ease environmental pressure on the island, a 6-square-km multipurpose complex is being built in Fuyuan, which is separated from the island by a river.

The 10-year project, costing more than 4 billion yuan ($601 million), will include service facilities for tourists to the island, a conference center and possibly a campus jointly run by Chinese and Russian universities.

Zhou, who is also the Party chief of the rural, pollution-free river town of Fuyuan, which has a population of less than 200,000, said more tourists using the land crossings could represent the "biggest opportunity" for local residents, who had incomes that averaged 20,993 yuan last year.

Fuyuan, which shares a border river with Russia to the north and east, is scores of kilometers from Khabarovsk, which has a population of about 600,000. In July, six vessels carrying more than 800 Chinese and Russian tourists and traders shuttled between Fuyuan and Khabarovsk each day.

A boat ride from Fuyuan to Khabarovsk takes 90 minutes, but a land drive would take just an hour. This could attract large numbers of Chinese and Russian tourists and revitalize local business that is usually halted in winter when rivers freeze, Zhou said.

Last year, 520,000 tourists visited Fuyuan and Heixiazi Island. This figure is expected to rise to 600,000 this year, according to local tourism officials.

While China has yet to reply to the Russian proposals on the crossings, Zhou is confident about the plan, saying, "It will only be a matter of time."

Qi Wenhai, a professor of China-Russia relations at Heilongjiang University, drawing on previous experience of local economic development in China, said a slower ecological approach to the island might be worthwhile if rapid growth means environmental sacrifices.

Qi said ecological tourism, green agriculture and full use of road and river ports with Russia were the right direction for the border area to take.

"My vision is for Fuyuan to become an international tourist resort," Zhou said.

@vostok

Please feel free to contribute if you have interesting news or updates.
 
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Interesting. This is the first time I heard of honey-based alcoholic beverage.
It's called mead.


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Altai-based company looks to export Russian mead to China
July 5, 2016 EVGENIYA OGURTSOVA, SPECIAL TO RBTH

Chinese distributors take interest in honey-based alcoholic beverage.


medovukha_lori-0011388685-a5_b.jpg

Russian Mead. Source: Lori/Legion-Media

Medovedov, an Altai-based company, is in talks with Chinese distributors to supply mead, a Russian honey-based alcoholic beverage.

“China is a limitless consumer market with a high demand for quality products,” Medovedov Chief Executive Alexander Grebenyuk told Altapress.ru. He added that Chinese companies were pondering over how to market the beverage, which is not well known in China.

According to the International Trade Center, Russia’s honey exports in 2014 stood at $3 million. China, Kazakhstan, UAE, and the U.S. are the main consumers of Russian honey.
 
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Interesting. This is the first time I heard of honey-based alcoholic beverage.
It's called mead.


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Altai-based company looks to export Russian mead to China
July 5, 2016 EVGENIYA OGURTSOVA, SPECIAL TO RBTH

Chinese distributors take interest in honey-based alcoholic beverage.


View attachment 329795
Russian Mead. Source: Lori/Legion-Media

Medovedov, an Altai-based company, is in talks with Chinese distributors to supply mead, a Russian honey-based alcoholic beverage.

“China is a limitless consumer market with a high demand for quality products,” Medovedov Chief Executive Alexander Grebenyuk told Altapress.ru. He added that Chinese companies were pondering over how to market the beverage, which is not well known in China.

According to the International Trade Center, Russia’s honey exports in 2014 stood at $3 million. China, Kazakhstan, UAE, and the U.S. are the main consumers of Russian honey.
In ancient times, when we did not have wine and vodka we were drinking beer and this one - mead.
 
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