The first cargo ship from Taiwan via a direct shipping route to the
Chinese mainland since 1949 docked at the port of Xiamen, southeast China's
Fujian Province yesterday.
Goods unloaded from 326 containers on the ship weighed 4,464 tonnes. They
were oranges, machines, electronic products and auto parts, and chemical
materials.
Zheng Yonggang, a mainland buyer of the Taiwan oranges, said the shipping of
such a batch of farm produce from Taiwan to Xiamen used to take seven days at
its quickest, since they needed to detour to Hong Kong.
With direct shipping opened, the ship left Kaohsiung City, Taiwan, Tuesday
evening and arrived in Xiamen Wednesday morning.
Orange farmers in Taiwan were worried about their bumper harvest of oranges
this year, which were much more than needed within the island.
A visit made by Chen Yunlin, chairman of the Association for Relations across
Taiwan Strait to Taipei in November helped open the orange sales to the
mainland, which was further facilitated by the opening of the direct shipping
across the straits.
The direct daily air transport across the straits started as a mainland-based
Shenzhen Airlines flight took off from the Shenzhen Airport for Taipei on
Monday, ending a 59-year ban on such links.
Another mainland jet left from Shanghai on a direct flight to Taiwan and
returned on Wednesday, fully loaded with Taiwan-made electronic goods.
The mainland is the top trade partner for the island and its biggest export
market and largest trade surplus provider.