Sputnik - Earlier, India' Union Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu called for the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) to be put into operation "as early as possible." The INSTC's estimated operational capacity is up to 30 million metric tons of goods per year.
Russia, India and Iran will meet later this month todiscuss the operation ofthe 7,200-km International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), which is seen as "a cheaper and shorter alternative tothe traditional route throughthe Suez Canal," according tothe Iranian news agency Press TV.
The Indian Ministry ofCommerce and Industry touted the INSTC as "the shortest multimodal transportation route linking the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf viaIran toRussia and Northern Europe."
The new project will involve both rail and sea transport. Indian goods will be delivered tothe Iranian city ofBandar Abbas onthe Persian Gulf coast, then toIran's Bandar Anzali nearthe Caspian Sea, fromwhich they will be sent acrossthe Caspian Sea tothe Russian city ofAstrakhan and then byrail toEurope.
Compared tothe Suez Canal, the INSTC will reduce the transport time betweenIndia's Mumbai and the Russian capital Moscow byabout 20 days.
On the whole, the new route will reduce the time and cost ofdelivering goods bymore than40 percent incomparison withthe Suez Canal. The annual estimated capacity ofthe INSTC will stand atbetween 20 and 30 million metric tons ofgoods.
During a meeting witha Russian business delegation inNew Delhi last Saturday, India's Union Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu underscored that "all issues may be resolved inorder tooperationalize the [INSTC] route asearly aspossible."
The first two trial deliveries throughthe new transport corridor were conducted inAugust 2014 and April 2017.