Key facts
- Thailand is reviving plans for a $30 billion "Land Bridge" project to connect the Andaman Sea and the Gulf of Thailand.
- The project aims to create an alternative to the Strait of Malacca by linking ports in Ranong and Chumphon.
- The proposed corridor includes a railway, highways, and local roads, designed to handle up to 20 million TEU annually.
- Government estimates suggest the land bridge could cut logistics costs by nearly 30% and transit times by up to 14 days.
- Local communities and experts express concerns about the project's economic viability, environmental impact, and displacement of livelihoods.
Thailand is reviving plans for an ambitious "Land Bridge" project, a 1 trillion baht ($30.45 billion) logistics corridor designed to connect the Andaman Sea and the Gulf of Thailand. The initiative, spearheaded by Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, aims to provide an alternative to the heavily congested Strait of Malacca, a critical global maritime chokepoint.
The proposed corridor would link two new deep-sea ports, one in Ranong on the western Andaman coast and another in Chumphon on the eastern Gulf of Thailand. The infrastructure would include a standard-gauge railway, multi-lane highways, and local roads, with the railway alone capable of handling up to 20 million Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit (TEU) containers annually. Government projections suggest this could reduce logistics costs by nearly 30% and cut transit times by up to 14 days for cargo moving between southern China and ports serving the Indian Ocean, South Asia, and the Middle East.
However, the project faces considerable hurdles. Analysts express skepticism about its economic competitiveness against the Malacca Strait, suggesting it might be more viable as a smaller-scale strategic asset for Thailand. Local communities, like that of fisherman Chaiyaporn Arunrasamee in Ranong, voice strong opposition, fearing disruption to their livelihoods and environments. Concerns also exist regarding the project's immense capital requirements and the potential for foreign control, which could lead to domestic political pushback. Regulators recently ordered a new Environmental and Health Impact Assessment due to discrepancies in data, adding another layer of complexity.
Past iterations of the Land Bridge concept, which included petrochemical complexes and oil refineries, failed to materialize. The current plan focuses solely on transport infrastructure and logistics, a framing intended to be more palatable to the public. Despite the challenges, Thai authorities are learning from past failures and plan to play a regulatory and supporting role, with financing expected to come from a consortium of private investors, including shipping lines, port operators, financiers, and land developers.