Russian and German railway experts started blueprinting a project to carry jumbo lorries by rail to Russia and the post-Soviet Baltics from other European countries
Published:
19 November 2004 y., Friday
Russian and German railway experts started blueprinting a project to carry jumbo lorries by rail to Russia and the post-Soviet Baltics from other European countries, report Russian Rail Company PR.
The contrailer transport project, under a tentative name of Lorries by Rail, came under debate today as top officers of the Kaliningrad Rail met a delegation of the German Railway Engineers' Union and German industrialists.
Russian and German railway companies will pool efforts for a promising arrangement to carry huge lorries on platforms, Russian Rail PR say in a statement.
The Russian Rail made an enthusiastic preliminary evaluation of the project, and work is underway on its practical terms.
It will take a Russian-German joint venture, to base in Kaliningrad, centre of Russia's Baltic exclave, to get the project going, said Victor Budovsky, Kaliningrad Rail manager.
German delegates passed him an invitation to appear at the next Hanover trade fair, due April. He will see transshipment machinery of a new type to put loaded lorries on railway platforms-a technique Europe has never tried. An initial three terminals will appear in Hanover, Poland's Poznan, and Kaliningrad.
Contrailer shipments will put an end to congestion in the busiest highways of Europe and European Russia so as to speed up long-distance transport, and reduce shipment costs and environment pollution, Kaliningrad Rail PR said to Novosti.
Šaltinis:
RIA Novosti
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Expectation Fed May Raise Rates Faster
more »
The number of accounts handled by Internet-based banks in Poland has exceeded one million
more »
ZARA, the leading world retailer of ready-made clothes, has signed a franchise agreement with the Lithuanian company Apranga
more »
Gazprom Wants to Edge Natural Gas Prices toward USD 60 per Cubic Meter
more »
Millennium Bank brandishes blueprint for better business
more »
TeliaSonera Sweden to build communications platform for Swedish police
more »
Nokia is Finland's biggest success story
more »
Austrian bank Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich Aktiengesellschaft and HSBC Bank from the United Kingdom plan to start their activities in Lithuania
more »
The Polish government has announced plans to grant its coal industry 9.5 billion zlotys (two billion euros) worth of aid between 2004 and 2010
more »
Lithuanian Prime Minister Algirdas Brazauskas said that Lithuania should not hurry to replace its national currency, the litas, with the euro
more »