Ceva Logistics has officially opened its 4,300 sqm road hub in Alashankou, on the border between China and Kazakhstan. Roughly a year after the initial announcement, the facility is now operational and aims to anchor LTL groupage flows on the China-Central Asia corridor under the TIR convention.
Cutting Transit Times in Half
The hub is positioned to halve transit times between China and Central Asian markets. Ceva says it intends to connect close to 30 cities across 15 countries spanning Central Asia, the Caucasus and Europe through the new platform. The facility sits inside a free trade zone, simplifying customs treatment of the consolidated road freight that flows through it.
Lenovo is among the early flagship customers. Ceva handles the manufacturer’s regular flows of PCs, mobile phones and servers between China and Kazakhstan, the operator said.
Operational Build: AGVs, Control Tower, AI Identification
The site is more than a warehouse with a TIR stamp. It runs AGVs on internal moves, sits behind a control tower that synchronises orders and customs status in real time, and uses AI-powered identification combined with RFID to track goods. Trucks operating out of the hub carry GPS and IoT sensors, giving shippers end-to-end visibility on cross-border legs that have traditionally been opaque.
Why Alashankou Matters
Alashankou has become a critical gateway for the China-Central Asia-Caucasus-Europe corridor. Total cargo volumes through the border crossing rose 8.6% last year, exceeding 29 million metric tons. Road freight under the TIR convention has emerged as a credible alternative to rail and sea on this corridor, especially for time-sensitive electronics flows that need a faster transit than Trans-Siberian rail offers but can absorb a road premium.
For Ceva, parent CMA CGM’s 3PL arm, the hub fills a gap in a network long dominated by sea and air offers. The bet is that nearshoring of European manufacturing into Central Asia and tightening sanctions geography will keep pulling more volumes through the corridor.



