Providing market research reports, industry analysis, company profiles and country reports for strategic planning, competitive intelligence, marketing and business research.
Search for Market Research Reports:    

Russia Freight Transport Report Q4 2009

Published by: Business Monitor International

Published: Oct. 14, 2009 - 74 Pages


Table of Contents


Executive Summary
SWOT Analysis
Russia Road Haulage Industry SWOT
Russia Political SWOT
Russia Economic SWOT
Russia Business Environment SWOT
Business Environment Ratings
Table: Europe Freight Transport Business Environment Ratings
Freight Industry Ranking
Transport Intensity Index
Russia Logistics Performance Index (LPI)
Political Risk Summary
Economic Risk Summary
Business Environment Risk Summary
Legal Code/Corruption
Red Tape
Labour Force
Industry Trends And Developments
Road
Rail
Air
Sea
Pipelines
Industry Forecast Scenario
Global Oil Products Market Review
Table Global Oil Prices, 2003-2013 (US$ per barrel)
Macroeconomic Environment
Table: Russia - Economic Activity, 2005-2013
Transport Outlook
Table: Freight Transport Indicators, 2006-2013
Table: Freight Carried, 2006-2013
Trade Environment
Table: Value Of Imports By Category, 2006-2013 (US$mn)
Table: Value Of Exports By Category, 2006-2013 (US$mn)
Table: Russia’s Top Export Destinations, 2002-2006 (US$mn)
Table: Export Trade, 2003-2006 (% growth y-o-y)
Table: Russia’s Top Import Sources, 2002-2006 (US$mn)
Table: Import Trade, 2003-2006 (% growth y-o-y)
Market Overview
Multi-Modal
Competitive Landscape: Multi-Modal
Road
Road Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Road
Rail
Rail Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Rail
Company Profile: Russian Railways JSC (RZD)
Air
Air Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Aviation
Company Profile: Aeroflot
Water
Water Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Maritime
Company Profile: Sovcomflot
Pipelines
Pipeline Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Pipelines
Country Snapshot: Russia Demographic Data
Section 1: Population
Table: Demographic Indicators, 2005-2030
Table: Rural/Urban Breakdown, 2005-2030
Section 2: Education And Healthcare
Table: Education, 2002-2005
Table: Vital Statistics, 2005-2030
Section 3: Labour Market And Spending Power
Table: Employment Indicators, 2001-2006
Table: Consumer Expenditure, 2000-2012 (US$)
Table: Average Annual Wages, 2000-2006
BMI Methodology
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts
Transport Industry
Sources

Abstract

Since our last report, we have again reduced our macroeconomic forecasts for Russia. The country is inthe midst of a deep economic crisis and we expect the economy in 2009 to contract by 7.8% in real terms.We see a recovery, with 2.0% growth, coming into play in 2010. Our forecast for the next five yearsworks out at an average annual GDP growth rate of 1.3%, compared with 7.0% in the 2004-2008 period.

The effect on our freight traffic forecasts comparing the two periods is therefore decidedly negative. Wenow expect freight carried across all modes, measured in mntkm, to achieve an annual average growthrate of 1.4% over the 2009-2013 period.

According to our latest estimates, transport and communications GDP rose by 5.9% in 2008, 0.3percentage points (pps) faster than overall GDP, which we estimate to have increased by 5.6%. For the2009-2013 forecast period we expect the transport and communications sector to outpace the economy asa whole, but by a narrow margin. It will achieve average annual growth of 1.5%, versus 1.3% for overallGDP. The total value of transport and communications GDP will rise to US$280.6bn in nominal terms by2013, representing 10.9% of Russia’s GDP. The transport and communications sector employed 5.80mnpeople, or 9.0% of the labour force last year. We see that figure falling to 5.66mn by 2013, whileremaining constant at 9.0% as a proportion of the total labour force.

Russia is a vast country with a thinly-spread infrastructure. One of the faster rates of growth will beregistered by pipeline throughput (an average of 3.0% per annum), reflecting resilient Asian demand forRussian oil and gas, as well as substantial, but slower-growing European demand. Air cargo will grow atan average of 2.9% per annum. This is a sharp reduction on earlier projections. Given the impact of theglobal financial crisis, we expect to see ongoing consolidation in the aviation sector.

The growth in pipeline turnover will, as mentioned, be based on continuing strong demand for Russian oiland gas, despite investor concerns over various issues, including the emerging international recession,political risk, and the after-effects of gas disputes with Ukraine (in late 2005 and early 2009) and Belarus(in late 2006). On balance, we believe there will be ongoing funding for big pipeline projects to marketsin both the West and the East, although foreign investors will be more cautious.

In the long term, demand for road haulage will be boosted by the expansion of the motor vehicle fleet,and the sophisticated door-to-door logistics requirements of an increasingly consumer-oriented society.

However, the near-term recession and the lack of enough new highway capacity will be a severe limitingfactor. We are now predicting annual average road haulage growth of 1.5%. Other modes of transport willexperience comparable growth curves. Shipping cargo turnover will also reflect the reduction in worldtrade in 2009, and will expand at an average 2.8% a year, while inland waterways will have a slowerperformance (+0.9% per annum).

Railway freight turnover will be hard hit by the downturn in 2009 and as a result will on average contractby 0.6% per annum over the forecast period. However, this reflects the depth of the 2009 recession anddespite this, the long-term future of the rail sector is strong. Russia has 85,000km of railways, making itthe second largest network in the world after the US. Rail dominates the freight transport networkaccounting for 42.7% of total turnover, according to the Federal State Statistics Service, and around 85%of total turnover, if pipeline traffic is not included. Rail has a competitive advantage due to the largedistances between different production centres in Russia. The road network is insufficient in terms ofcoverage and quality of the roads, while the waterways freeze during Russia’s long winter. The majorcargo types carried by rail, are coal (23% of the total) followed by oil products, (18%) and constructionmaterials, (15%).

Get Full Details About This Report >>
US: 800.298.5699
Int'l: +1.240.747.3093
Buy this Report
Price and Delivery Options

Search Inside Report


 

About MarketResearch.com
MarketResearch.com is an online aggregator selling over 250,000 market research reports, company profiles and country profiles from over 650 research firms. Our reports will provide you with the critical business and competitive intelligence you need for strategic planning and marketing research. Coverage includes the US, UK, Europe, Asia and global markets.

 

© MarketResearch.com 2010