Vietnam Slashes Int'L Rail Cargo Charges By 40 Pct
Posted on: Friday, 31 March 2006, 09:00 CST
Vietnam slashes int'l rail cargo charges by 40 pct
HANOI, March 31 (Xinhua) -- Vietnam has recently lowered transit fees by 40 percent for transporting cargoes to three countries by railway, local newspaper Vietnam News reported Friday.
The lower freight charge, in accordance with the International Transit Tariffs, is applied to routes linking Vietnam with China, Mongolia and Kazakhstan, said the stated-owned Vietnam Railways Corporation, the country's sole railway operator.
The corporation plans to construct a warehouse at the Mongolian border to facilitate further transport of goods at lower charges, which will eventually lure more Vietnamese enterprises into transporting goods by railway, instead of sea.
Now, the railway takes 15 days to cover 5,000 km from the capital of Hanoi to Mongolian and Russian borders, while transporting cargoes by sea takes 45 days, the corporation said.
The corporation transported over 1 million tons of goods across the Vietnamese border in 2005. Meanwhile, its total revenues rose 3.1 percent to over 4.73 trillion Vietnamese dong (297.48 million U.S. dollars).
Source: Xinhua News Agency - CEIS
Related Articles
- CSX Corporation Chief Transportation Officer to Address Citi Investment Research Transportation Conference
- Chesapeake Energy Corporation Secures Transportation Capacity for Growing Fayetteville Shale Production
- Rafts Used To Transport Goods In Ancient Times
- El Paso Corporation to Transport Gas for PG&E
- El Paso Corporation Announces Transportation Agreement With Pacific Gas and Electric Company for Ruby Pipeline
- New Report Gives a Detailed Analysis of 25 Listed Companies in China's Road and Railway Transportation Industry
- Vietnam Invests More in Railway Upgrade This Year
- Railway Transportation in China Not Affected By Bad Weather
- Vietnam Predicts Imported Essential Goods Volumes This Year
- Vietnam, Cambodia Boost Transport Cooperation
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds