Iran tests a pilot corridor to ship Russian products to India

Iran’s state-owned shipping company has said it has begun the first shipment of Russian goods to India using a new corridor through the Islamic Republic, an Iranian port official has said.

The Russian cargo consisted of two 41-tonne laminate containers that departed from St. Petersburg for Astrakhan, Iran’s state news agency said on Saturday, citing Dariush Jamali, director of a joint Iranian-Russian station. Astrakhan.

The report did not say when the cargo left, which it described as an initial “pilot” transport for the runway test, nor did it give further details about the cargo.

From Astrakhan, the cargo will cross the Caspian Sea to the northern Iranian port of Anzali and be transported by road to the southern port of Bandar Abbas in the Persian Gulf. From there it will be loaded on a ship and sent to the Indian port of Nhava Sheva, IRNA reported.

Jamali said the shipment was coordinated and managed by the state-owned Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines Group and its regional offices in Russia and India and is expected to take 25 days.

Since sanctions were imposed on Russia over its war in Ukraine, Iranian officials have sought to revive a stalled plan to develop a so-called North-South corridor used by Iran to connect Russia with Asian export markets.

The plan eventually includes the construction of a railway line that will be able to transport goods arriving in the Iranian ports of the Caspian Sea to the southeastern port of Chabahar.

Source: Capital

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