The Argentine government invested the funds in trains from China, and in 2013, CNR Corporation, a predecessor of CRRC, delivered 20 locomotives for Argentina’s passenger trains. At the same time, the state-owned construction and engineering concern China Machinery and Engineering Corp (CMEC) took on a contract worth $2.4 billion to commence work on repairing almost 5,000 kilometers of track on the Belgrano freight rail system in northern Argentina. During the course of the project CMEC increased the finance involved by a further $2.4 billion as part of a contract that also covered the supply of 100 new diesel locomotives from CRRC. The entire fleet, powered by 2,200 kW engines from mtu, will be in service by mid-2018 and modernization of the Belgrano routes will be completed in 2019. That means a huge boost for Argentina’s agriculture sector. Currently, 96% of cereal crops transported within the country are carried by truck. Rail transport is almost four times more energy-efficient and is therefore much cheaper.
Trains for industrial transformation
CRRC’s first customer west of China was the New Zealand rail operator KiwiRail. During the 1980s, New Zealand set out on the path from an agriculture-based structure to a modern market economy. Alongside tourism, the export of milk, timber and other products like goat meat, lamb and butter played a significant role. For its transport system, the island state in the Pacific opted for a 10-year plan to modernize its ailing rail network. In 2009, KiwiRail purchased 20 diesel locomotives from CRRC predecessor CNR Dalian. Follow-up orders in 2013, 2015 and 2017 increased the number of vehicles ordered to 63, and with new trains in service, in 2016 KiwiRail was able to transport in excess of 100 million tons of freight.