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Logistics in Latvia

Logistics in Latvia, due to the country's geographical advantages as a gateway between the Scandinavia, Central Europe and Eastern Europe, has always been a priority area. Ensuring good logistics and transport infrastructure is vital for Latvia, as the country's roads are abundant with commercial vehicles from the neighbouring countries. This is also the reason why delivering goods to Latvia as a part of market entry processes is an easy task.

Since 2004, when Latvia became a member-state of the European Union, the country's borders with other member-states are open and do not require mandatory customs checks to transport goods. On average, 30 - 35 million tonnes of cargo crosses the country each year, including roads, railroads, aircraft and waterways.

Roads
There are more than a thousand roads in the road network of Latvia, including State Main, State Regional and State Local roads. The total road length in Latvia is 13181.616 km. Out of them, 10 570.151 km are hard surface roads - all the main and the biggest roads belong to this category. 2611.465 km of roads are gravel roads - these are mostly local and some regional roads.

The State Main roads are the biggest roads connecting major cities, e.g. the Riga - Ventspils road. There are 15 State Main Roads in Latvia, and all of them connect the major trade hubs of the country. The major cities joined by the State Main road network are Riga (port/airport), Daugavpils (railroad hub), Ventspils (port/airport) and Liepāja (port). The roads also connect bigger cities of regional importance - Rezekne, Jelgava, Jēkabpils and others. 9 of the State Main roads lead to the borders with other countries: Russia (1 road), Lithuania (4 roads), Estonia (3 roads) and Belarus (1 road).

There are a number of State Main roads with ring roads, designed to go around bigger cities, so as to allow transit vehicles to move faster, without the need to navigate through cities. These roads are:

Daugavpils ring road, connecting Kalkūni and Tilti
Rēzekne ring road
Riga ring road, connecting Baltezers and Saulkalne
Riga ring road, connecting Salaspils and Babīte
The State Regional roads are big roads that usually connect bigger cities and/or cities of regional importance, but can also connect cities to important nearby facilities, such as the P133 road that connects Riga and Riga Airport. Many of them also lead to the borders with neighbouring countries, but the roads themselves are more narrow than the State Main roads, which is why big commercial vehicles do not typically use them.

The State Local roads are all the other roads that are not included in the other two categories. These are the smallest, often gravel, roads, which connect smaller cities and villages with bigger ones, smaller cities with other smaller cities or provide an alternative route to State Main and Regional roads.

Railroads
Latvian railroads are under the supervision of the ‘Latvian Railroads; (in Latvian: Latvijas dzelzceļš) - the state-owned company, whose aim is to manage and control railway logistics in Latvia. The company has 6 daughter companies:

AS ‘LatRailNet'
SIA ‘LDZ Apsardze' (security)
LDz infrastruktūra (infrastructure)
LDz Cargo (transportation)
LDz Ritošā sastāva serviss (maintenance)
Latvian railroads are the main commercial transportation infrastructure, especially for inland traffic. Out of all the transportation types, railroads carry the biggest amount of cargo - approximately 50 million tons of it every year. Railways connect Latvia with neighbouring countries and also provides way to the rest of Europe, as well as to the Eastern Asia, as far as Japan and China. Latvian railroads also connect all the major cities and trading hubs, such as Riga, Ventspils, Liepāja and Daugavpils.

https://www.baltic-legal.com/market-entry-latvia-logistics-eng.htm

City, State Riga