The Northern East-West Freight Corridor (Eurasian Landbridge)
The idea to link the Far East and Europe takes its origin with the construction of the Trans Siberian railway linking Moscow to Vladivostok, completed in 1916. With a length of 9,200 km it is the longest rail segment in the world. It was initially used solely as an inland rail link, but in the 1960s the Soviet Union started offering a landbridge service from Vladivostok using the Trans Siberian to reach Western Europe. This came to be known as the Northern East-West corridor or the Eurasian Landbridge. However, geopolitical considerations would limit the adoption of this trade corridor by international shipping companies. In addition, the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s created a context of geopolitical instability within Russia and its former republics as well as a lack of investments and maintenance over the existing rail and terminal facilities. The idea of using the corridor as a transcontinental and transnational route was abandoned.
The beginning of the 21st century has however brought renewed interests for the NEW corridor, especially with the booming Asian trade and the increasing pressure to ship containerized freight in a time sensitive manner over long distances. The Northern East-West freight corridor in its contemporary form is composed of a maritime segment and a land segment:
All the necessary infrastructure exists to ensure the setting of the NEW corridor, particularly along the Trans Siberian which is double tracked and electrified. The question remains at improving some segments to insure a better integration of all the elements of this very complex multinational transport chain. Among the numerous challenges of the NEW corridor are:
In spite of these challenges, the prospects of the Eurasian Landbridge remain positive. The time benefits realized by the use of this corridor would in addition help relieve congestion of the American West coast gateways (especially Los Angeles / Long Beach), as well as along the American landbridge. For China, an opportunity to develop the interior provinces and avoid congestion at the coastal ports could also be partially fulfilled by the Eurasian Landbrdige.
In January 2008 a long distance service called the "Beijing–Hamburg Container Express" was inaugurated. The 10,000 km (6,200 miles) service takes 15 days to link the Chinese capital to the German port city, going through Mongolia, the Russian Federation, Belarus and Poland. The maritime journey covering the same markets would take about 30 days.