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Belt and Road Initiative: Revitalizing northwest China's Wuwei city

Updated: 2017-05-10 11:16:21

( CGTN )

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But as the Maritime Silk Road gained in prominence, eclipsing the land route, Wuwei's glory slowly faded away. Now, its fortunes have changed again. [Photo provided to CGTN]

But as the Maritime Silk Road gained in prominence, eclipsing the land route, Wuwei's glory slowly faded away. Now, its fortunes have changed again: a 170-square-kilometer international inland port under the Belt and Road Initiative is under construction with an aim to rejuvenate the city.

A bonded logistics center is the core of the inland port. It started operations in late 2014, becoming the first facility monitored and managed by customs in Gansu Province. It covers 500,000 square meters and aims to become a platform for international logistics, trade, financial support and processing for exports. About 70 companies will be housed here.

Yang Yu, vice president of HTTH Investment Development limited company, which runs the bonded logistics center, said the export-oriented economy in the western province still lags behind, so they want to build a good platform, which can attract export-oriented companies, and lower their cost.

By the end of this year, the center will have a new addition: a train track. It will introduce China Railway express trains to the logistics center. Tang Baoping, office manager of the Zhengyang Contemporary Agriculture Service Company, noted it was complicated to go through all the procedures to export products. They had to change trains and sometimes even lost their goods.

Now they will be able to finish everything at the logistics center and have the goods delivered right in the neighborhood. For now, these China Railyway express trains run through a station 30 kilometers from the logistics center. Since late 2014, more than 80 "Tian Man Hao" express trains have delivered 140,000 tons of goods worth 220 million US dollars.

An important part of the inland port blueprint, Tian Ma Hao express trains have reached several Central Asian countries, and plan to go as far as Amsterdam. They not only collect goods from Gansu Province but also all over China. Such efforts aim to make Wuwei an important transportation hub in west China again. And it looks like efforts are paying off: Wuwei, this pearl of the ancient Silk Road is glowing again after 2,000 years.

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