Landlocked Central Asia gets shorter railway link to Persian Gulf

The new route will enhance exports of natural gas, grain and textiles

By 
Marat Gurt
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: December 15, 2014

Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan and Iran inaugurated a new railway route Dec. 3 that will improve resource-rich Central Asia’s access to markets in the Middle East and South Asia.

The 925-km (578-mile) stretch of railway, built jointly by the three Caspian neighbours, will ease the exchange of goods between the landlocked post-Soviet region and the countries lying along the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf.

It will also accelerate shipments of goods between the Persian Gulf and South Asia on the one hand and Russia and Europe on the other.

Read Also

Xiuling Guo, the chief executive of Nurasa, a company in Singapore, attended the Protein Industries Canada annual meeting in Winnipeg September 25. Nurasa has partnered with Protein Industries Canada to help companies export more plant based ingredients and food to Asia | Robert Arnason photo

Targeting plant-based exports to Asia

Single ‘Asian consumer’ doesn’t exist, market analyst says; Canadian exporters to get help targeting diverse Asian food markets

“These are just our first steps,” Iranian President Hassan Rouhani told a ceremony in Turkmenistan which marked the end of the building of the final Turkmen-Iranian link of the new route, stretching from Uzen in western Kazakhstan to Gorgan in Iran.

“This (link) will cut trade costs and make trade more efficient.”

Rouhani, accompanied by his Kazakh counterpart Nursultan Nazarbayev and Turkmenistan’s Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, symbolically bolted up the railway’s final link with wrenches.

The initial carrying capacity of the new railway route of five million tonnes of cargo a year is set to rise to 20 million tonnes annually in 2020.

“I am confident that this new route will create new geopolitical and new geo-economic opportunities for the region’s development, as well as for our nations,” Berdymukhamedov said.

Turkmenistan, holder of the world’s fourth-largest reserves of natural gas, hopes to ship textiles and products of its nascent gas-processing industry along the new route, consistent with its strategy of economic diversification.

Oil-rich Kazakhstan, Central Asia’s largest economy and grain producer, plans to boost exports of wheat to Iran and other markets of the region.

The construction of this railway link, the cost of which was not disclosed, was started in 2009. A source with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be identified, estimated the cost of the construction at $2 billion.

The Asian Development Bank and the Islamic Development Bank helped to finance the project.

explore

Stories from our other publications