BRI and Strategic Rise of Shandong: Lessons for Pakistan
Shandong serves as a vital maritime and logistical anchor for the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), making it a key intersection between the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, thereby connecting China’s inland regions with global markets and heavily facilitating trade with ASEAN, Japan and South Korea.
Thus, the BRI has revolutionized many provinces of China in terms of manufacturing capacity, quality industrialization and trans-regional connectivity.
Obviously, Shandong operates a vast network connecting coastal seaports with dry ports in inland regions, ensuring fluid cargo transition along the Eurasian Continental Bridge. Similarly, the province is a major departure point for China-Europe freight trains, which connect around 50 cities across more than 20 countries, linking Shandong directly with Central Asia and Europe. Hence, Shandong’s interconnected logistics and maritime network are playing an important role in the strategic expansion of the BRI, producing a win-win proposition for all.
Moreover, Shandong’s state-owned enterprises are celebrated for exporting high-end industrial solutions, such as electrical equipment and photovoltaic energy systems, to infrastructure-deficient Central Asian states like Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Not only that, but it actively invests millions of dollars to foster cultural, agricultural and economic ties with other BRI partners.
Evidently, it is integral to note that this progress underpins that Shandong province will play a bigger role in the Belt and Road Initiative, particularly with the development of the Shandong Province Port Group, which further expands its operations into the country’s inland areas.
Definitely, Qingdao Port,........
