China Daily

Paris to bid ‘au revoir’ to its Metro tickets

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PARIS — They’ve been in use since 1900, when the Paris Metro opened for business, but soon the city’s familiar rectangula­r tickets will become a thing of the past, replaced by a fully automated system similar to the one in London.

For many tourists, the little white tickets — often purchased in a ‘carnet’ of 10 — are inseparabl­e from a visit to the city. They’re frequently found years later tucked between the pages of a book, in the back of a wallet or under a sofa.

But they are also easy to lose, often end up littering the pavements, where they take up to a year to decompose, and the magnetic strip on the back tends to fail over time, meaning the tickets, 550 million of which are sold each year, don’t work.

As a result Ile-de-France Mobilites, the organizati­on that coordinate­s the transport networks in Paris and its surroundin­g region, voted on Wednesday to move ahead with the process of automating the system by 2021.

“We’re going to gradually phase out the use of the metro ticket,” said Valerie Pecresse, president of the IDFM and head of the region that includes Paris.

While many commuters already use a weekly, monthly or annual electronic card called the Navigo to get around, similar to London’s Oyster card, IDFM is introducin­g two more options designed to appeal to tourists and occasional travelers.

The metro is the 10th busiest subway system in the world, handling around 1.5 billion passengers a year. But when it comes to technology, it lags behind the likes of London and Tokyo, and the little tickets are one of the main problems.

“Five percent of metro tickets get demagnetiz­ed and stop working, frustratin­g customers,” said IDFM spokesman Sebastien Mabille. “The new passes will effectivel­y solve this problem.”

The new passes will be introduced in April and October next year, allowing plenty of time for the metro, and its interconne­cted bus and commuter rail network, to become fully digital before the Paris Olympics in 2024.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday, the Paris railway network, known as the RATP, celebrated winning a soccer bet with its counterpar­t in Brussels.

After the French team’s victory over Belgium in the World Cup semifinals on Tuesday, the STIB transport network in the Belgian capital was forced to play a 2002 song by French rock hero Johnny Hallyday called Tous Ensemble.

With its chorus “We are champions, we are all together, go the Blues”, the anthem was played twice across the metro system during rush hour, said Francoise Ledune, spokeswoma­n for STIB.

 ?? GONZALO FUENTES / REUTERS ?? An elevated Paris Metro passes over a bridge next to the EiffelTowe­r in Paris.
GONZALO FUENTES / REUTERS An elevated Paris Metro passes over a bridge next to the EiffelTowe­r in Paris.

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