Intercontinental rail connection
The service is based on a short-sea connection between Asian origin ports in Korea, Japan or China and the port of Nakhodka in the Russian Far East (operated by Sealand Asia – A Maersk Company), followed by an intercontinental rail connection across Russia from Nakhodka to St. Petersburg, which takes 11 days.
The last leg of the product is another short-sea connection between St. Petersburg and ports in Finland (Helsinki and Rauma), continental Europe, such as Gdansk (Poland), Bremerhaven (Germany), or Scandinavia, operated by Sealand Europe. “We are delighted that this unique product, designed for our customers in both Asia and Europe, formally becomes a weekly service and gets a permanent place in our product portfolio,” comments Zsolt Katona, Managing Director, Eastern Europe at Maersk.
Attractive transit times
AE19 is a particularly attractive solution for customers with time-sensitive cargoes
“This has been possible thanks to increased interest from our customers, who appreciate its attractive transit times and cost competitiveness.”
Being a standard product with a Maersk bill of lading for both refrigerated and dry containers, AE19 is a particularly attractive solution for customers with time-sensitive cargoes, offering them faster transit times compared to ocean-only products and a significant cost advantage compared to air freight. In addition, the product allows customers to avoid congestion on border crossings and offers fast-track options for transit in Russia based on the blockchain solution.
Transportation service providers
This is enabled by TradeLens, a platform jointly developed by IBM and Maersk, which provides the AE19 customer base with shipping data directly from the source of each participating entity in near real-time, all while connecting this rail corridor directly to its established ecosystem of international transportation service providers.
AE19 is part of Maersk’s Asia-Europe portfolio alongside the ocean. In March 2020, the service was also launched in the eastbound direction, connecting North European origins with several destination ports in Asia.