KUNMING - "It shortens the travel time. We can have breakfast in Thailand, enjoy our lunch in Laos, and have supper in China," said Yoo Chienyuenyongpong, chairman of a Thailand-based logistics company.
He was referring to the Kunming-Bangkok Highway, a transnational road running from the capital of Southwest China's Yunnan province through Laos to Bangkok, Thailand's capital.
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Logistics enterprises want more free flows of goods to improve efficiency and reduce costs.
"In the next decade, cross-border transportation and logistics in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) will enter into a new era with enhanced ties between China, South and Southeast Asian countries," said Liu Jinxin, secretary-general of the Greater Mekong Subregion Logistics Research Center, on Monday.
GMS comprises Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, and China's Yunnan province. About 240 million people live in the region.
"We hope to deepen cooperation, improve local logistics network and build stable and harmonious relations with more nations and companies," said Yoo Chienyuenyongpong.
His expectation was echoed by Somphone Phasavath, deputy managing director of Lao Freight Forwarder, who said there are about 18 transnational roads connecting Laos with neighboring countries.