Container Corporation of India has flagged off its first-ever dedicated Reefer Express train service from ICD JRY Kanpur to Mundra Port — a milestone that opens a direct, temperature-controlled rail corridor between one of north India’s most important inland logistics centres and the country’s largest commercial port, creating a transformative new option for exporters of perishable and temperature-sensitive goods from the Uttar Pradesh and central India hinterland.
The inaugural Reefer Express was enabled through collaboration between CONCOR, freight forwarder M/s SPJ Pvt. Ltd., and Maersk — one of the world’s largest container shipping lines. The ceremony was officiated by Ashutosh Singh, Deputy Chief Traffic Manager, Kanpur, in the presence of officials from Indian Railways, Customs, and CONCOR, underscoring the multi-agency coordination required to operationalise a new modal solution of this complexity.
Why a Dedicated Reefer Rail Service Is a Game Changer
Cold chain logistics in India has historically been dominated by road transport, with temperature-controlled trucks carrying perishable cargo from farms and processing units to ports and consumption centres. Rail has been largely absent from the cold chain equation due to the absence of adequate reefer wagon capacity, reliable scheduling, and infrastructure for maintaining temperature integrity during long-distance journeys. The Reefer Express addresses all three gaps by deploying purpose-built temperature-controlled containers on a dedicated block train with a fixed schedule and door-to-port logistics managed end-to-end by CONCOR.
For Uttar Pradesh exporters of food products, agricultural commodities, pharmaceuticals, and dairy products, the Kanpur-Mundra Reefer Express offers a compelling alternative to road freight. The Kanpur-Mundra distance is approximately 1,200 kilometres, a journey that by road involves 24-36 hours of transit with fuel costs, driver overheads, and the risk of temperature excursions at handover points. By rail, the Reefer Express can complete the same journey on a more predictable schedule with lower fuel consumption, reduced carbon emissions, and superior temperature consistency for sensitive cargo.
Integration with Maersk’s Export Network
The involvement of Maersk as a commercial partner is strategically important for the service’s long-term viability. Maersk’s global export network connects Mundra Port to virtually every major consumer market in the world, and by integrating the CONCOR Reefer Express with its booking platform and container management system, Maersk enables exporters to book seamless door-to-port-to-destination cold chain solutions with a single logistics provider. This type of integrated offering — combining rail haulage, port handling, and ocean freight under one roof — is the direction in which global logistics is moving, and CONCOR’s partnership with Maersk places the new service at the leading edge of that trend.
Indore ICD and Rail Infrastructure Expansion
The Reefer Express launch complements a broader rail logistics infrastructure investment story. Indore is set to receive a ₹150 crore inland container depot near Pithampur with an annual capacity of approximately 120,000 TEUs, featuring dedicated rail sidings and customs clearance facilities. The Rajkot Division of Indian Railways has operated its first 87-wagon long-haul freight train, advancing the heavy-haul freight strategy. And the Madurai Railway Division has for the first time in its history exceeded its annual freight loading target, crossing 3.5 million tonnes in FY26 — driven by fertiliser, coal, and miscellaneous goods. Together, these developments paint a picture of India’s railway freight system steadily building the capacity and capability needed to compete with road transport across a wider range of cargo types.







