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Corridor focus

Routes and logistics corridors for international B2B supply chains

This page is structured as a corridor overview rather than a list of countries. It highlights the directions where multimodal coordination, transit control and route design matter most.

Corridors

Corridor scenarios we build around

This page works as an indexable landing page for the corridor logic behind the updated positioning.

Europe - Central Asia

Import and supply routes between European shippers and receivers in Kazakhstan and the wider Central Asian region.

When it fits

  • Import of equipment, components or goods from the EU
  • Regular deliveries from European suppliers to Kazakhstan or Uzbekistan

What to consider

  • Multi-country transit requires coordination of documents at each stage
  • Choice between road, rail or multimodal affects timelines and cost

What to send for a quote

  • Origin and destination points
  • Cargo type, weight and dimensions
  • Desired delivery timeline

China - Central Asia

A core corridor for container, rail and multimodal imports into Kazakhstan and neighboring markets.

When it fits

  • Regular imports from China — inventory replenishment, raw materials, finished goods
  • Container or wagon shipments with delivery to final destination

What to consider

  • Connection between main leg (rail or sea) and last mile to warehouse
  • Customs clearance at CN–KZ border and documentation requirements

What to send for a quote

  • City of origin in China and final unloading point
  • Cargo type, quantity and packaging
  • Timeline and storage requirements

Europe - China

Cross-border supply chains where route orchestration matters between European and Chinese counterparties.

When it fits

  • Supply chains between the EU and China via transit countries
  • When coordination of multiple transport types on a long route is needed

What to consider

  • Multiple parties and checkpoints — alignment of all stages is critical
  • Several route options with different price/timeline trade-offs

What to send for a quote

  • Full route: origin and destination
  • Cargo nature and value
  • Priority: speed, cost or balance

Trans-Caspian Corridor and Caspian scenarios

Alternative route setups where feasibility, transit logic and handoff planning matter as much as price.

When it fits

  • Alternative to northern routes through Russia
  • Multimodal scenarios with Caspian ferry crossing

What to consider

  • High sensitivity to transit connections and ferry schedules
  • Requires detailed chain analysis before confirming timelines

What to send for a quote

  • Route and rationale for corridor choice
  • Volume and regularity of shipments
  • Timeline or budget constraints

Working model

How we approach corridor and route planning

corporate clients need to understand not only the geography, but how the route will be built, where the control points are and how the handoffs will work.

Step 1

We start with the shipment task

We review origin, destination, cargo format, timing sensitivity, documents and restrictions.

Step 2

Then we choose the corridor and transport format

We assess whether road, rail, sea or multimodal logic best fits the route and how the handoffs should be organized.

Step 3

Then we return with a workable route setup

The output is not a vague promise, but a route scenario and a clear basis for a commercial request.

What's next

Choose where to start working with us

Explore our capabilities, learn more about the company, or send a request right away — we'll respond within 2–4 hours during business hours.

Discuss a shipment

Need a rate quote or route analysis?

Send us the route, cargo type and timing requirements. We will prepare a transport option and get back to you with next steps.

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