For Russian enterprises and companies operating through Russia, Moscow is the logistics heart of the country. From automotive manufacturing in Kaluga region to machinery production in St. Petersburg and the oil and gas sector in Tyumen, Russian companies depend on reliable, flexible, and efficient transport solutions for trade with China, Russia’s largest trading partner. Traditional supply chains between Russian production centers and Chinese markets carry a critical vulnerability: they rely on maritime routes through the Suez Canal, the Strait of Hormuz, and the Malacca Strait, each a potential chokepoint that can disrupt supply chains with little warning.
When geopolitical tensions escalate, shipping lines reroute vessels around the Cape of Good Hope, adding 15 to 20 days to transit times. Port congestion in Far East ports such as Vladivostok or in European ports can add weeks of delays. For Russian enterprises importing or exporting machinery, automotive components, consumer goods, or energy equipment, these delays translate into production stoppages, inventory shortages, and missed customer commitments.
China-Russia Trucking LHZ has developed an overland network that bypasses these maritime chokepoints entirely. With its main hub in Moscow, the FTL TIR route originates at Russian industrial centers and follows a pure road path through Kazakhstan, across the Caspian Sea via roll-on/roll-off ferry, and into China through the Alashankou and Khorgos border crossings. Total transit time from Moscow to Shanghai is 18 to 22 days, from Moscow to Urumqi 12 to 14 days.
What makes this network strategically valuable for Russian enterprises is its independence from maritime routes. It does not rely on the Suez Canal, the Strait of Hormuz, or the Malacca Strait. It operates entirely on highways and ferries, with customs authorities along the route only verifying TIR seals without opening cargo for inspection. Under the TIR system, cargo moves under a single customs declaration from origin to destination, with sealed vehicles passing through border crossings without repeated inspections.
For Russian enterprises, this creates a reliable alternative to maritime shipping, not a contingency plan that requires weeks to activate, but a regularly operating network with predictable transit times. The network operates five weekly departures in both directions, ensuring capacity is available for Russia-China FTL shipments.
The Moscow hub serves as the central consolidation point for all China-Russia Trucking LHZ operations in Russia. Cargo arriving from China is processed at the Moscow facility, cleared through customs under the TIR system, and prepared for final delivery across Russia. For westbound cargo, products from across Russia are consolidated in Moscow for transport back to China. The hub’s strategic location provides access to Russia’s industrial network, as well as to Belarus, Kazakhstan, and other EAEU countries.
The FTL advantage is critical for Russian industry. Full truckload shipping means no consolidation delays, no intermediate handling, and predictable delivery schedules. Just-in-time manufacturing, standard in Russia’s automotive industry, requires precise delivery windows, and FTL TIR transport delivers the reliability that Russian industry demands.
The return leg from China to Russia carries significant commercial potential. China is a major exporter of machinery, electronics, automotive components, medical devices, consumer goods, and industrial equipment. Russian enterprises sourcing these products can utilize the same FTL TIR corridor for eastbound shipments. The five weekly departures from China to Moscow provide reliable capacity for these return flows.
For Russia’s automotive industry, specialized FTL transport ensures just-in-time delivery requirements are met. Temperature-controlled trucks protect sensitive electronic components. Heavy-lift flatbeds transport machinery and production equipment. Curtain-sider trucks handle automotive parts with efficient loading and unloading.
For Russia’s oil and gas industry, heavy-lift flatbeds with secure lashing systems ensure the safe arrival of equipment for oil and gas fields. For the pharmaceutical industry, temperature-controlled trucks maintain cold chain integrity for medicines and vaccines. For retail, curtain-sider trucks enable flexible consolidation and efficient distribution of consumer goods.
Industrial exports from Russia to China also carry significant potential. Russia is a major exporter of energy products, metals, fertilizers, timber, chemicals, and agricultural goods. Chinese enterprises sourcing these products can utilize the same FTL TIR corridor for westbound shipments, completing the fully bidirectional supply chain loop.
China-Russia Trucking LHZ maintains a fleet of over 1,200 TIR-certified vehicles, including temperature-controlled trucks for pharmaceuticals and food, heavy-lift flatbeds for machinery and industrial equipment, and curtain-siders for automotive parts and consumer goods. All vehicles are equipped with real-time tracking, providing Russian enterprises with full transparency from departure to delivery.
The dual customs clearance service simplifies cross-border complexity. Export clearance in Russia and import clearance in China are managed through a single point of contact, with documentation structured to meet Russian trade compliance requirements. The TIR system adds a layer of security with sealed cargo and real-time tracking throughout the journey.
For Russian supply chain officers sourcing from China or supplying the Chinese market, the decision is not whether to use FTL overland transport for every shipment, but whether to have a reliable alternative available when needed. With five weekly departures in both directions between Russia and China, with its main hub in Moscow, China-Russia Trucking LHZ ensures that capacity exists, routes are proven, and customs procedures are standardized, ready to absorb cargo flows in either direction.
Headquartered in Guangzhou Nansha Free Trade Zone, with its main hub in Moscow, China-Russia Trucking (China) Logistics Service Co., Ltd. has fifteen years of experience in overland corridors between China and Russia. Its brand LHZ operates dedicated teams serving Russian industrial clients, ensuring that supply chains between Russia and China remain stable, compliant, and resilient regardless of conditions in global shipping lanes.
China-Russia Trucking LHZ covers Russia, Belarus, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Armenia.