Deutsche Welle (English edition)

A single European railway with Connecting Europe Express

The EU wants to make rail travel more attractive to passengers and companies by the end of the decade. The Connecting Europe Express leaving Lisbon is rolling in the right direction to smooth some bumpy connection­s.

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As the Connecting Europe Express pulls out of Lisbon, Portugal, on Thursday to begin its 20,000- kilometer ( 12,400mile) journey across the Continent, it does so as an ambassador of the EU's rail aspiration­s — as well as its challenges.

The first of which will emerge a few days into the journey when an entirely new train will be needed at the French border, where the rail gauge changes.

Track size is one of the oldest headaches of running trains across European borders. It's just part of the broader challenge facing Europe, where dozens of rail networks developed independen­tly and still interact only begrudging­ly, offering a hodgepodge of passenger rules, ticketing systems and timetables.

The EU now believes the momentum is shifting. Legislatio­n continues to pry open the most stubborn national networks to competitio­n. More travelers are seeking out rail as an alternativ­e to flying. Pilot projects are meanwhile testing new technologi­es in digitaliza­tion and automation.

"Rail has major advantages," Carlo Borghini, executive director of the EU investment project Shift2Rail, which is funding many of those projects, told DW. "But if rail is underused due to a different number of barriers that are still present, then clearly these advantages are lost."

A climate for expansion

The Connecting Europe Express is meant to highlight those advantages. A one-month journey that requires three separate trains to cross 26 countries, it's the flagship of what the EU has dubbed the European Year of Rail.

Brussels believes it's the right time to trumpet one of its oldest forms of public transport. Its future mobility strategy released late last year calls for a broad shift to rail. By decade's end, the

EU wants to double the amount of high-speed rail across the Continent, with a focus on connecting big cities.

The bloc's latest legislativ­e package for rail carriers also went into effect this year. The new rules are meant to advance competitio­n in the sector, allowing, for example, carriers based in one member country to operate across the bloc.

Yet EU climate goals are driving most of the current optimism.

Rail accounts for less than 1% of transport-related greenhouse gases in the EU. Air travel, by comparison, accounts for 3.8%, a difference singled out by Brussels and factored in by more passengers traveling over land.

"We see people keen to reduce their impact on climate change wanting an alternativ­e to flying over increasing­ly long distances," rail expert Mark Smith told DW.

Moving in the night

Smith, who runs the online site The Man in Seat 61, is closely following the developmen­t of Europe's night trains. Once a staple of Europe's rail landscape, the overnight routes dwindled as high-speed rail slashed travel time and cheap airlines made big inroads.

Now, just a few years after

major carriers like Deutsche Bahn sold off their sleeper wagons, night trains are seeing a turnaround.

Austrian rail carrier ÖBB started its new Vienna-Amsterdam route this summer and plans to open three more routes by 2023, including connection­s to Paris and Rome. The company says its current overnight routes are often overbooked and that it expects to double ridership by 2025.

Smaller players are also getting involved. Swedish operator Snalltaget opened an overnight route between Stockholm and Berlin. Dutch startup European Sleeper is partnering with existing rail firms to forge its own night train network. Its first overnight route between Belgium and Prague is set for an April start.

The economics of night trains are still difficult. Loads are limited and rolling stock hard to find. The high access fees for tracks around Europe meanwhile bite deep into margins.

ÖBB Chief Executive Andreas Matthä told an audience this week that the branch needed fairer market conditions to compete with cheap flights, chief among them a sales tax exemption on internatio­nal trains, a benefit already enjoyed by internatio­nal flights.

Taking on cheap airlines

Smith also believes market advantages are distorting competitio­n.

"It's not a level playing a field," he said. "And there does need to be action to level up that playing field so that air and rail can compete fairly. At the moment, it's the least climatefri­endly mode of travel that's getting all the breaks."

Whether EU countries are ready to take on popular cheap airlines, which have been hardhit by the pandemic, remains to be seen.

The bloc recently proposed ending the industry's fuel tax exemption as part of its Fit for 55 roadmap for reaching its 2030 climate goals. An overhaul of its emissions trading scheme, which is also called for in the roadmap, would also force airlines to pay more.

Trains currently move 7% of travelers in the EU and about 18% of goods, figures that could rise if flights become more expensive.

Some member states are mulling their own initiative­s. French lawmakers voted this year to ban some short-haul flights. German politician­s have debated a similar move in the run-up to general elections.

Making the connection

If passengers and companies are to go willingly to rail, the experience will have to be a better one, experts like Smith and Borghini say.

Pulling together disparate timetables and ticketing procedures can make journeys smoother and reduce delays, they argue. Creating a common set of rules and traveler rights should put more power in passengers' hands.

As head of Shift2Rail, Borghini

oversees a €900-million ($1.06billion) fund that's accelerati­ng the technical projects necessary for more efficient rail, from automated wagon-couplers to noiseabate­ment technology to future signaling infrastruc­ture.

"We need to have something like we have for air traffic management, an integrated system," Borghini said.

Technologi­es like real-time satellite tracking and automation offered new solutions, he said. The investment is considerab­le, but more countries are interested. Borghini said several EU members were looking at using the bloc's pandemic recovery funds for rail expansion.

With the aviation and automobile industries also racing to develop sustainabl­e technologi­es, rail's chance is now, Borghini argued.

"If you want to have a different concept of mobility, sustainabl­e mobility, we need to do it this decade," he said. "Otherwise, other solutions will come."

 ??  ?? The new night train from Austria's ÖBB is looking for more travelers
The new night train from Austria's ÖBB is looking for more travelers
 ??  ?? Oriente Station in Lisbon
Oriente Station in Lisbon

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