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Chinese freight railway sustains supply chain for European Christmas shoppers

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

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After a more than 10,000-km journey across Eurasia in about two weeks, the “steel camels” along the modern Silk Road carry goods made in China.

This means adding to Europeans’ joys of purchasing or receiving gifts for Christmas and the New Year.



MAJOR HUB IN EUROPE


Visiting local Christmas markets with a glass of mulled wine in hand and purchasing gifts for the beloved.

From Berlin to London, people across Europe are eager to embrace a happy Christmas this year despite the raging COVID-19 pandemic.

Unlike last year, there are no flat-out bans on Christmas gatherings in most European countries and despite the coronavirus-induced logistics and supply-chain bottlenecks, stores are replete with products, many of which are Chinese-made.

Poland, the largest country in Central Eastern Europe, is a gateway for Chinese-made products entering the European Union (EU) market.

All these products are made in China and sales are much better than last year, said the storekeeper, without giving her name. They have customers from Poland as well as our neighboring countries, including Belarus, Ukraine, Latvia and Estonia.

GD Poland, a 4,000-hectare Chinese shopping centre where the store is located, is one of the largest distribution hubs of Chinese-made products in Central Eastern Europe. GD stands for the southern Chinese province of Guangdong.

Despite the COVID-19-induced disruptions of air and sea routes, which caused widespread concern over supply shortages this year, most of the China-Europe Railway Express trains have arrived in Poland on schedule.

Jiang, 52, was the first locomotive driver on the freight train route from the southwestern Chinese municipality of Chongqing to Duisburg in Germany when the line was opened to traffic in 2011.


The train runs from Chongqing to Dazhou, a city located in the neighboring Sichuan Province, and then runs further north into Xinjiang and heads for Europe.


YIWU MEANS “SANTA’S WORKSHOP”


China is a global factory that produces a large portion of Christmas-themed products sold in the world.

About 80 percent of these products are exported from Yiwu, a small town dubbed as “Santa’s workshop” in east China’s Zhejiang Province.

This year, Christmas decoration manufacturers there saw rising orders.

Sales are better than last year, up about 20-30 percent, said Cai Qinliang, secretary general of the Yiwu Christmas Products Industry Association that has more than 200 members.

Christmas-themed products from Yiwu are mainly sold in South America, Russia, the EU and Southeast Asia.

Stephen Perry, chairman of Britain’s 48 Group Club, has witnessed China’s growth into a global factory of Christmas goods.

Our company was the first to start importing consumer goods and artifacts from China, said Perry, whose father started the business of importing traditional Chinese goods since the 1950s.

During the pre-holiday season, British customers flooded London’s bustling Oxford Street for shopping, many of them found their best picks, from clothes, shoes, toys to smartphones and laptops.

HOPE FOR ECONOMIC RECOVERY

The booming Christmas sales of Chinese-made products and the momentum in foreign trade growth bring hope for a global economic recovery, according to John Pearson, Global Chief Executive Officer of DHL Express.

China remains one of the vital engines to the world economic recovery and continues to post a steady recovery and growth itself, Pearson said in an interview with Xinhua, adding that the country’s economic stability and sustainable growth are contributing to the recovery of the world economy.

Meanwhile, China’s foreign trade maintains the momentum of growth this year thanks to the recovering global economy and trade that spur more demand for commodities from China, as well as the stable industrial chains in China, Pearson added, stressing the interdependence of the Chinese and global economies in a globalized world.


According to figures published in October by China’s General Administration of Customs, China stood as one of the EU’s largest trading partners.


In the first three quarters of this year, China’s exports to the EU totaled 3.88 trillion yuan (roughly 608.5 billion U.S. dollars), up 20.5 percent over the same period of last year.

Like the Chinese Spring Festival, the Christmas holidays are a rare opportunity for family reunification.







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