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12 years, over 150 countries: Inside the Belt and Road Initiative's global legacy

By Yigit Ulubel | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2025-09-17 10:53
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A teacher leads students on an experience ride aboard the Chinesebuilt Lagos Rail Mass Transit Blue Line in Lagos, Nigeria, on Feb 28, 2024. The light rail is part of the city's efforts to promote greener transportation. HAN XU/XINHUA

Launched in September 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is not merely a physical infrastructure project, but, perhaps more importantly, a civilizational reconnection: the "Belt" reviving overland Silk Road corridors through Central Asia, and the "Road" rekindling maritime trade routes from Southeast Asia to Africa. It has since been formally aligned with China's constitutional principles and has been elevated as a core component of the Chinese national development strategy. But what has this initiative truly achieved in its 12-year journey, as the world has been reshaped by pandemics, geopolitical fractures, and climate emergencies?

As of early 2025, more than 150 countries — representing nearly 75 percent of the world's population and over half of the global GDP — have joined the BRI. This is no longer a speculative blueprint; it is the largest modern infrastructure initiative in human history. China's Ministry of Commerce reports that cumulative BRI investment and construction contract values have exceeded $1 trillion across the participating countries. Many major projects have received financing, technical support, or coordination under BRI frameworks, though some rely on local or multilateral resources.

Take the China-Laos Railway, completed in December 2021, which was entirely funded and built under BRI frameworks. This 1,035-kilometer electrified line transformed landlocked Laos from a remote hinterland into a regional logistics hub. Travel time between Kunming and Vientiane was cut in half, from 20 hours to just 10 hours, boosting bilateral trade by over 20 percent within two years. Similarly, the Port of Piraeus in Greece, acquired and expanded by China's COSCO Shipping under BRI agreements, has surged to become Europe's fourth-largest container terminal, handling over 5 million TEUs annually and tripling its throughput since 2016.

In Africa, the Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway — financed by Chinese policy banks as part of BRI cooperation agreements — carries over 2 million passengers and transports 6 million tons of cargo annually, and cut freight costs by 40 percent. The line is set to extend into Uganda, Rwanda, and South Sudan, integrating East African economies into a unified rail network. In Indonesia, the Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Rail — built by the PT Kereta Cepat Indonesia-China (KCIC) joint venture with major Chinese engineering and financial support — was launched as Southeast Asia's first high-speed rail line.

The new line cut travel time from three hours to just 40 minutes and introduced critical high-speed rail technology to the region. Meanwhile, in the heart of Europe, the Hungary-Serbia Railway — which will link the Balkans directly to the Eurasian rail network — will cut Belgrade-to-Budapest transit time from eight hours to three-and-a-half hours when it opens in early 2026. The project was fully financed and engineered under BRI protocols.

Beyond steel and concrete, the BRI has become a catalyst for green transformation. In Pakistan, the Quaid-e-Azam Solar Park—the nation's largest solar facility, operating at 400 MW and expanding to 500 MW—supplies electricity to hundreds of thousands of households while driving clean energy adoption under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a flagship BRI project.

In Kenya, the Chinese-backed Garissa Solar Plant (50 MW) and other BRI-aligned renewables now operate under updated environmental standards. By 2026, analysts expect a growing share of BRI funding to support renewable energy, low-carbon transport, and eco-industrial projects, reflecting China's commitment to green development under the BRI.

The projects already underway — railways, ports, power grids, and digital corridors — are laying the groundwork for a more integrated global economy. As the BRI enters its thirteenth year, the focus is shifting from scale to substance. What emerges in the coming decades may not be a single narrative of Chinese influence but a mosaic of interconnected markets, supply chains, and energy systems.

From railways and ports, to power grids and digital corridors, BRI projects have already transformed the landscape of global connectivity by creating tangible opportunities for trade, investment, and economic growth across continents. As the initiative moves forward, these achievements will continue to mature into engines of regional integration and global cooperation, helping partner countries unlock new levels of development while strengthening the foundations of shared prosperity.

The author holds a Master's degree in Management from the Harbin Institute of Technology (HIT) and specializes in strategic business solutions for Chinese enterprises, both domestically and internationally.

The views don't necessarily represent those of China Daily.

If you have a specific expertise, or would like to share your thought about our stories, then send us your writings at opinion@chinadaily.com.cn, and comment@chinadaily.com.cn.

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