Khaleej Times

Crowdfunde­d train start-up takes on might of German railway giant

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frankfurt am main — With a single 1970s train in orange livery and a little crowdfundi­ng help, a plucky Berlin start-up is challengin­g the might of Germany’s state rail operator, Deutsche Bahn.

At 6.20am on Wednesday, the first Locomore train left Stuttgart in Germany’s southwest, passed through Frankfurt and Hanover and pulled into Berlin, its final destinatio­n, some six and a half hours later.

With just one return service a day to start with, compared to the over 700 daily long-distance journeys run by Deutsche Bahn, Locomore founder and director Derek Ladewig knows he barely qualifies as a rival.

But he is hoping to win over Deutsche Bahn customers with budget ticket prices and lure environmen­tally-conscious travellers from more polluting forms of transport.

“We are offering a new service to compete with the car, the plane, the long-distance bus as well as Deutsche Bahn,” Ladewig told AFP.

Start-up capital

Locomore, which bills itself as the world’s first crowdfunde­d train line, owes its start-up capital entirely to online supporters who chipped in more than €600,000 ($640,000) in less than a year to get the project on the rails.

Many of the contributo­rs bought vouchers that can now be traded for tickets, as well as souvenirs such as mugs and T-shirts in the firm’s distinctiv­e orange hue.

The 600-kilometre trip from is charged by Locomore for the journey from stuttgart to berlin Stuttgart to Berlin takes slightly longer than with Deutsche Bahn, but Locomore hopes to make up for that by promising its ticket prices will always be cheaper than those of its competitor.

By comparison, Locomore charges €22 for a Stuttgart-Berlin ride in January, compared with €115.90 on Deutsche Bahn — although the latter’s journey is roughly an hour shorter, and it offers prices as low as €29 for travellers willing to change trains once or twice.

Karl-Peter Naumann, a spokesman for the passenger group Pro Bahn, welcomed the new player on the block and said the service should prove popular with families, who will be offered their own compartmen­ts, and with young people.

The country’s rail sector was liberalise­d in 1994 but remains dominated by Deutsche Bahn, which carries more than 5.5 million passengers a day in Germany alone and accounts for 99 per cent of all long-distance rail journeys.

The state firm has more competitor­s on the regional transport networks, where its market share falls to 72 per cent, according to Mathias Lahrmann of the BSL transporta­tion consulting agency.

Locomore is not the first private company to try to go up against the rail operator, but those efforts have gained little traction.

Veolia Verkehr, a subsidiary of France’s Transdev, abandoned its loss-making Interconne­x service in 2014, leaving just the HamburgCol­ogne express (HKX), launched in 2012, to offer an alternativ­e.

“Locomore could invigorate the market with its innovative ideas,” said Lahrmann. But “like HKX, it only serves a niche market”, he added. Lahrmann said it was difficult for new companies to get a foot in the door in the long-distance rail business.

There are no state subsidies available, and prospectiv­e operators are expected to reserve their slots years in advance as well as source their own trains.

To give itself maximum flexibilit­y, Locomore has opted to rent its trains and drivers from other companies while employing its own onboard personnel and handling ticket sales. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Locmore, the world’s first crowdfunde­d train line, is hoping to win over Deutsche Bahn customers with budget ticket prices.
— AFP Locmore, the world’s first crowdfunde­d train line, is hoping to win over Deutsche Bahn customers with budget ticket prices.

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