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
Commerzbank and its chief executive, Klaus-Peter Müller, risk being dragged into the struggle for control of Megafon, one of Russia's largest mobile phone operators
more »
Hungarian Visa cardholders made purchases totaling USD 865.2 million using their Visa cards in Hungary last year
more »
A new World Bank report released reveals some encouraging signs that the magnitude and negative impact that corruption exerts on business may be declining in many countries of the Europe and Central Asia region
more »
Banks and government agree on need to boost creditors' rights
more »
Hungarian Government officials and executives of key foreign investors reviewed economic policy and its bearing on foreign investment at a meeting of the Investors’ Council in Parliament last Tuesday
more »
Hungary’s export volume rose 18.4% in January compared to a year earlier, while imports rose 12.1%, the Central Statistics Office (KSH) reported
more »
OLAF and Europol strengthen cooperation in combating financial crime
more »
The European Commission has expressed serious worries about the state of Czech public finances
more »
Business is booming in Poland's special economic zones
more »
The Czech central bank said Tuesday its decision to keep interest rates unchanged in late March was approved unanimously by the bank's board
more »