Railcare Signs Heavy Cargo Rail Deal with Maersk in Sweden
Railcare signed a framework agreement with Maersk’s Martin Bencher for heavy cargo rail transports in Sweden, with the first shipment scheduled for July 2025.

SKELLEFTEÅ, Sweden – Railcare Group AB has entered a framework agreement with Martin Bencher (Scandinavia) AB, a company of the Maersk Group, to act as its preferred partner for special rail transports in Sweden. The deal, effective immediately, covers cargo that cannot use standard solutions due to size, weight or configuration, with the first shipment planned for July. No volume guarantees or disclosed financial value accompany the contract.
What Does This Contract Cover?
The agreement designates Railcare as Martin Bencher’s preferred rail operator in Sweden for cargo that exceeds normal loading gauge, axle-load or dimensional limits. Typical shipments include large industrial components such as power transformers, machine parts and heavy equipment. Railcare will provide end-to-end planning, permit management, transport execution and coordination with other logistics providers, deploying its own fleet of multi-axle wagons and escort vehicles from its Skellefteå headquarters. The framework is non-exclusive and contains no minimum volume commitments, meaning each shipment is executed on an as-needed basis.
Key Contract Data
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Contract Name | Framework agreement for special rail transport in Sweden |
| Total Value | Not disclosed |
| Parties Involved | Railcare Group AB and Martin Bencher (Scandinavia) AB (a Maersk Group company) |
| Timeline / Completion | First shipment July 2025; open-ended framework, termination date not disclosed |
| Country / Corridor | Sweden; specific rail corridors not disclosed |
How Does This Compare to Similar Contracts?
Maersk acquired Martin Bencher Group in 2022 to bolster its project logistics capabilities for oversized and heavy‑lift cargo, and this agreement extends that reach to on‑rail execution in Sweden. While no directly comparable Nordic framework for dedicated project rail services is publicly available, the 37th State of Logistics report (2025) notes that rail and intermodal sectors are gaining momentum as capacity tightens and regulatory enforcement reshapes the market (Source: State of Logistics Report, 2025). In Germany, DB Cargo and Siemens signed a similar heavy‑transport framework in 2024 for transformer shipments (Source: DB Cargo, 2024). Railcare’s annual sales of approximately SEK 670 million (€57 million) place it as a regional specialist next to much larger European incumbents, while Maersk’s broader multimodal restructuring—including the resumption of Suez Canal services through the Gemini Cooperation in 2025—underlines the conglomerate’s intent to embed rail into its end‑to‑end logistics chain (Source: Logistics Management, 2025).
Editor’s Analysis
The partnership cements Railcare’s niche as a project‑rail expert in a segment still dominated by road transport for heavy and out‑of‑gauge loads. For Maersk, integrating special rail under the Martin Bencher umbrella closes a missing link in the physical supply chain, potentially cutting lead times and carbon emissions on Swedish corridors. The timing aligns with Swedish infrastructure ambitions such as the Norrbotniabanan railway, which will improve north‑south freight flow for heavy‑industry clients (Source: Trafikverket, 2025). The absence of volume guarantees reflects the inherently ad‑hoc nature of project cargo, but it also signals that Railcare’s value proposition rests on rapid mobilization and deep local permitting expertise rather than on committed tonnage.
FAQ
Q: What is the value of the Railcare‑Maersk framework agreement?
A: Financial terms have not been disclosed. No volume guarantees are included, so total revenue will depend entirely on the number and scale of individual shipments ordered by Martin Bencher.
Q: When will the first shipment under this agreement take place?
A: The first special transport is scheduled for July 2025. Railcare has already begun planning and permitting for this initial movement; the specific cargo and route have not been made public.
Q: What makes a load “special” under this contract?
A: Special cargo exceeds standard loading gauge or axle‑load limits—typically industrial equipment such as power transformers, large machine parts, or construction components. Railcare must design bespoke transport solutions, including route surveys, bridge assessments, and custom railcar configurations.






