Bombay – St. Petersburg Rail Link thru Iran – Azerbaijan
by 2028
·
A key part of the southern plan is a 100-mile $1.7
billion (Rs. 16000 crs) railway set to begin construction
this year that would be the final link in a route between Russia and Iranian ports
on the Persian Gulf.
·
The new route will cut the time for cargo to travel
to Mumbai from St. Petersburg to only 10 days, from 30 to 45 days now.
·
Russia’s
trade with China has soared 61 percent, to more than $240 billion in 2023.
·
Trade
is also surging with India, reaching $65 billion, more than four times what it was
in 2021.
·
The
new railway will link two Iranian cities, Astara and Rasht,
connecting tracks between Iran and Azerbaijan to the north.
·
Russia also wants to restore an old Soviet railway that connected
Moscow with Iran and Turkey via Armenia and the Azerbaijani enclave of Nakhichevan.
·
Logistics,
he said, may even replace oil as the biggest driver of Azerbaijan’s economy.
[ABS News Service/13.03.2024]
Once dependent on Europe for trade, Russia has been forging new routes
that will allow it to skirt Western restrictions. A planned railway through
Iran could be key for those ambitions.
For centuries,
trade with Europe was the main pillar of Russia’s economy.
The war in
Ukraine ended that, with Western sanctions and other restrictions increasingly cutting
Russia off from European markets. In response, Moscow has expanded ties with the
countries more willing to do business with it — China to the east, and, via a southern
route, India and the countries of the Persian Gulf.
That southern
route has now become a focus of Russian policymakers as they try to build infrastructure
for their plans to pivot away from the West for good. The effort faces challenges,
including questions over financing, doubts over the reliability of Russia’s new
partners, and threats of Western sanctions targeting countries that trade with Russia.
A key part
of the southern plan is a 100-mile $1.7 billion (Rs. 16000 crs)
railway set to begin construction this year that would be the final link in a route
between Russia and Iranian ports on the Persian Gulf — providing easy access to
destinations like Mumbai, India’s trading capital. Russia has agreed to loan Iran
$1.4 billion to finance the project.
“As Russia’s
traditional trade routes were largely blocked, it had to look at other options,”
said Rauf Agamirzayev, a transport and logistics expert
based in Baku, Azerbaijan, referring to the southern route.
Russia has found numerous ways to
skirt the Western trade restrictions, bringing in things like machinery from India
and arms from Iran, as well as a host of consumer goods — often through Gulf countries
and Turkey — that the government sees as crucial for showing Russians that it can
maintain living standards during a time of war.
While some consumer goods still
trickle in legally from Europe, a whole range of restricted or difficult-to-get
items are also widely available in Russia. Oysters from France, brought in by plane
with a detour in some third location, are available at one Moscow restaurant, and
Italian truffles and French champagne, whose export was banned by the European Union, can be found at an upscale
grocery store chain.
The Russian government sees the
railway project through Iran — and another line it hopes to restore that would provide
access to Turkey — as essential for locking in and speeding the flow of all such
imports into the country. It is also seen as critical for stepping up exports of
the Russian natural resources that are critical for the economy.
President Vladimir V. Putin of
Russia has said that the new route will cut the time for
cargo to travel to Mumbai from St. Petersburg to only 10 days, from 30 to 45 days
now. Russian officials are calling it a “breakthrough revolutionary project”
that will compete with the Suez Canal.
It will also
complement Russia’s trading routes toward China, currently its largest trading partner,
as those reach overcapacity. Since 2021, just before the full-scale invasion of
Ukraine in February 2022, Russia’s trade with China has
soared 61 percent, to more than $240 billion in 2023, according to Chinese figures.
Trade
is also surging with India, reaching $65 billion, more than four times what it was
in 2021. Russia’s trade with both
countries in 2023 surpassed its prewar trade with the
European Union, which stood at $282 billion in 2021.
The
new railway will link two Iranian cities, Astara and Rasht,
connecting tracks between Iran and Azerbaijan to the north, and then to the Russian railway grid. When
finished — the new link is expected to be completed in 2028 — the resulting “North-South
Transport Corridor” will stretch unbroken for more than 4,300 miles, out of reach
of Western sanctions.
From Iranian
facilities on the Persian Gulf, Russian traders will have easy access to India,
as well as to destinations like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan
and beyond.
A trading route
through the Caucasus and Central Asia and across the Caspian Sea to Iran has already
been a significant one for Russia in recent months, according to Lloyds List, which
specializes in maritime news and intelligence. Russia has also been shipping oil
and products like coking coal and fertilizer the opposite way.
Gagik Aghajanyan, the head of Apaven, the
biggest freight-forwarding company in Armenia, said his fleet of trucks often picks
up loads of consumer goods, delivered by rail from ports in Georgia on the Black
Sea, and then transfers them north across the land border to Russia. Other goods
that are more sensitive, like those that are prohibited by Western states, can be
shipped via Iran, which shares a border with Armenia, he said. From Iranian ports,
goods can then travel to Russia over the Caspian.
“The Georgians
say, ‘These are sanctioned goods; we will not let you through to Russia,’” Mr. Aghajanyan said in an interview. “And the Iranians say, ‘We
don’t care.’”
In 2023, trade
volumes across the route increased by 38 percent over 2021, according to Andrei
R. Belousov, Russia’s deputy prime minister for the economy,
and could triple by 2030.
In addition to the line through Iran,
Russia also wants to restore an old Soviet railway that
connected Moscow with Iran and Turkey via Armenia and the Azerbaijani enclave of
Nakhichevan. The railway was abandoned in the early 1990s when war broke out
between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
Russia hopes
to have the railway up and running within a few years, but the project has been
entangled in the complicated geopolitics of the region.
Azerbaijan
is eager to compete the link, but Armenia has been reluctant to commit to the project
over concerns over who would control the tracks through its territory. In Soviet
times, they belonged to the Azerbaijani railway. In 2020, Armenia signed an agreement
that ceded control of it to the Russian security service.
But Russia,
which was once closely allied with Armenia, has become increasingly friendly with
Azerbaijan, essentially standing by as Azerbaijan took over full control of the
breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which had been under the control of Armenian
separatists for more than three decades. Now, the Armenians want to control its
part of the railway link itself, centered on the town
of Meghri, strategically placed on the border with Iran.
For now, the
train station in Meghri remains a relic of the Soviet
past, its rooms filled with old railway maps and tickets hidden under withered leaves
and dust. Its tracks, built more than a century ago by czarist Russia, were long
ago replaced by vegetable gardens.
The Azerbaijani
railway company is close to finishing its stretch of tracks toward Armenia through
territories it had occupied ahead of the 2020 war. From there, it can go either
via Armenia or via Iran, if Armenia decides to stay away from the route.
“Russia can
get a railway route to the Persian Gulf and Turkey,” said Nikita Smagin, an expert on Russian policy in the Middle East with
the Russian International Affairs Council think tank. “It can do it pretty quickly,
in up to two years.”
Rovshan Rustamov, the head of the Azerbaijani railways
company, said that Azerbaijan’s part of the project should be completed by the end
of 2024. Logistics, he said, may even replace oil as the
biggest driver of Azerbaijan’s economy.
Azerbaijan
is also hoping the port of Baku can profit from the country’s new position as a
strategic hub for goods traveling between Russia and the outside world — as well
as between Asia and Europe, conveniently bypassing Russia.
After the Russian invasion of Ukraine began, the authorities
in Baku expedited plans to develop a second phase of the port to cope with an expected
surge in cargo traffic.
“The feasibility study that we had before showed that
we did not have to rush the expansion,” said Taleh Ziyadov, the director general of the Port of Baku. “After the
war, we did a new study that showed that we had to put that date earlier, maybe
to 2024.”
While Russian officials have lauded the new trade routes,
some business leaders are not so sure.
“This looks like a forced decision that hasn’t been
formed because of objective reasons,” said Ivan Fedyakov,
who runs InfoLine, a Russian market consultancy that advises
companies on how to survive under the current restrictions.
“What is being created in essence is a trade route for
the pariahs,” said Ram Ben Tzion, whose company Publican
analyzes evasion of trade restrictions.