As heightened conflict in the Middle East disrupts global shipping, China and Russia are considering deeper logistics cooperation, including increased use of the Arctic shipping route, to secure a more resilient supply chain. The topics were covered at the inaugural China-Russia Logistics Business Forum.
At the inaugural China-Russia Logistics Business Forum, Dmitry Birichevsky, director of the Department of Economic Cooperation at Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, called for global instability to be factored into bilateral relations. “We are obliged to take all of this into account,” he said at the forum. “That is precisely why independent payment mechanisms and logistics between our countries, including transit through friendly countries of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), are a perfect example of how this can work.” Birichevsky said the Middle East situation revealed how the global economy and logistics networks were vulnerable to the unilateral actions of those fuelling wars. The EAEU is a five-nation customs union consisting of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Russia, while the CIS is a broader regional organisation that includes nine former Soviet republics. Keywords from the forum include logistics, shipping disruption, Arctic Ocean, Arctic shipping route, Arkhangelsk, Moscow, Murmansk, NewNew Shipping, Rosatom, supply chains and transit.