π±πΉπ±π»πͺπͺBaltic Rail Freight Restructuring Accelerates (Update)
Rail freight volumes across the Baltic states continue to shrink as the region transitions from transit-based logistics toward domestic and EU-integrated transport systems.
π±π» LATVIA
π¦ Rail Freight Snapshot
π¦ Latvia β Data Card (2025)
2024: 11.47 mln tonnes
2025: 9.45 mln tonnes
Change: β17.6%
Structure 2025
β’ Domestic: 1.89 mln t
β’ International: 7.56 mln t
β’ Transit (subset): ~5.9 mln t
π Structural shift
β’ Imports dominate freight structure
β’ Transit reduced to ~0.7 mln tonnes
β’ Port-linked cargo dropped sharply
βοΈ Key drivers
β’ Collapse of east-west transit flows
β’ Weakening rail-port logistics integration
β’ Infrastructure designed for much larger volumes
πͺπͺ ESTONIA
π¦ Rail Freight Snapshot
2024: ~3.0 mln tonnes
2025: ~3.0 mln tonnes (market estimate)
Change: β Stable at low level
π Structural shift
β’ International cargo collapsed after 2022
β’ Domestic freight remains relatively stable
β’ Passenger transport gaining strategic priority
βοΈ Key drivers
β’ Loss of Russian transit cargo
β’ Limited domestic freight base
β’ Strategic pivot toward passenger mobility
π±πΉ LITHUANIA
π¦ Rail Freight Snapshot
2024: 25.7 mln tonnes
2025: ~22β23 mln tonnes (extrapolated)
π Structural shift
β’ Domestic freight now dominant (~62%)
β’ Transit through Kaliningrad declining
β’ KlaipΔda port logistics remains key anchor
βοΈ Key drivers
β’ Strong industrial logistics base
β’ Integration with EU freight corridors
β’ Diversification away from transit dependence
Regional Transformation
Baltic railways are shifting from large-scale transit infrastructure toward diversified regional logistics systems.
Emerging regional pattern
βοΈ Lithuania β adaptation through diversification
βοΈ Estonia β pivot toward passenger and regional transport
βοΈ Latvia β fastest contraction of transit-driven model
Outlook
Baltic rail freight is entering a new equilibrium. Historical transit volumes are unlikely to return, but railway systems remain strategically important for regional mobility, supply chains and infrastructure resilience. BSM Β© 2026
Image: photos/photo_191@08-02-2026_11-58-52.jpg