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The new European regulatory framework for railways Catherine PRUDHOMME

European Commission. The new European regulatory framework for railways Catherine PRUDHOMME “Railway Transport and Interoperability” Unit. Summary. 1 - European railways in figures 2 - EU legislation in force 3 - EU legislation under examination 4 - Further proposals under preparation

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The new European regulatory framework for railways Catherine PRUDHOMME

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  1. European Commission The new European regulatory framework for railways Catherine PRUDHOMME “Railway Transport and Interoperability” Unit

  2. Summary 1 - European railways in figures 2 - EU legislation in force 3 - EU legislation under examination 4 - Further proposals under preparation 5 - State of play of the reform 6 - Conclusions

  3. Rail Passenger Traffic (billion p.km) EU(15) ? Source: Prognos + European Transport Report 2002

  4. Rail Passenger Traffic Market Shares of Passenger Transport (in %) CEEC EU (15) Source: Prognos, European Transport Report 2002

  5. Rail Passenger Traffic: trends High speed train Plane Conv. rail Car

  6. Rail Freight Traffic (billion tkm) ? EU 15 Source: Prognos + European Transport Report 2002

  7. Market Shares of Freight Transport (in %) CEEC EU (15) Source: Prognos, European Transport Report 2002

  8. Rail Safety EU 15 Nbr of Fatalities Railway passengers Sources: UIC; National Statistics

  9. Rail Safety Fatalities Railway crossings (EU 15) Sources: UIC; National Statistics

  10. Staff employed in the railway sector (EU 15)

  11. Financing State aids awarded to the Railway Sector MEUR

  12. Financing State aids awarded to the Railway Sector MEUR

  13. Optimise the use of existing infrastructure Rebalancing the use of modes in favour of environmental friendly modes : rail, inland waterways, shortsea shipping Fair and efficient pricing for infrastructures use Users first Aims of the European Transport Policy

  14. A major objective of the European Railway Policy To adapt railways to the European dimension

  15. « Creation of an integrated European railway area to allow cross border services under a single responsibility in order to guarantee the quality of services to the customer » A major objective of the European Railway Policy

  16. Eurobarometer - Spring 2003 - EU 15 “If safety standards are met, competition is the best way to make the railways more efficient.” Tend to agree 71.5 % Tend to disagree 12.1 % No opinion 16.4 %

  17. A. Decided 1. To ensure fair and non discriminatory access to the infrastructure Separation of essential functions i.e. allocation of capacity and charging Open access to infra and services for international freight services from 15 March 2003 on Transeuropean Rail Freight Network (TERFN) from 15 March 2008 on the whole network Charging principle of social marginal costs (with possible mark-ups) National regulatory body to survey functioning of the market and arbitrate conflicts between infra-manager and railway undertaking Main actions undertaken at European level

  18. Main actions undertaken at European level • A new geography for the Railway Industry RB Regulatory Body IM RU Infrastructure Manager Railway Undertaking

  19. Main actions undertaken at European level • Current regulatory framework for rail (Directive 2001/12, 2001/13 2001/14) Regulatory bodies Charging Applicants NETWORK STATEMENT Priority rules (in case of congestion) Infrastructure managers Allocation process

  20. Main actions undertaken at European level A. Decided 2. To ensure interoperability of the network • High Speed (Dir. 96/48) • Trans-European Network for High Speed rail • Adoption of technical specifications for interoperability (TSI) for the whole system (plus European standards)In force since 30 Nov. 2002 • ERTMS deployment and migration strategy to be prepared by each Member State

  21. Main actions undertaken at European level • Conventional Rail (Dir. 2001/16) • Applicable to TEN as identified (i.e. also TERFN) • Mandate to AEIF in June 2001 for TSI in 2004 on key items for freight traffic • New mandates to AEIF in Sept. 2002

  22. Interoperability related activitiesProgramming mandates and TSI development

  23. DIRECTIVE Main actions undertaken at European level The three-level system Essential requirements(Annex III) Subsystems(Annex II) Technical Specifications for Interoperability TSI Interoperability Constituents EUROPEAN STANDARDS

  24. B. Broad agreement on the second packageTo be finally decided before end 2003 by Council and Parliament 1. Open access for international freight services on the whole network from 2006 and national services from 2008 (Council/EP conciliation on this) 2. Extension of interoperability requirement to the whole network (under conditions): accepted 3. Accession of the Community to OTIF: accepted Main actions undertaken at European level

  25. 4. Directive on railway safety Creation of national safety authority Delivery of safety certificate Common indicators, methods and targets Creation of independent investigation bodies for accidents 5. Creation of an European Railway Agency (ERA) from 2004 To prepare Technical Specifications for Interoperability with representatives of the sector To prepare Common Safety Methods and Targets To advise Commission and Member States 100 people (+ 15 Mio € a year) Main actions undertaken at European level

  26. C. To be proposed in 2003Subject to decisions of the Commission 1. Access to the infrastructure for international passenger services (requested by EP for 2006). Issues to consider: High speed rail services Occasional services Cross border regional services Scheduled international services Problem of cabotage Link with Public service obligations Main actions undertaken at European level

  27. 2. Further discussion on the draft regulation on public services obligations after Altmark judgement(?) Regional and national services Obligation to tender if exclusive rights or compensation for P.S. 3. Rights and obligations of international rail passengers 4. Freight quality (compensation schemes considered) 5. Drivers licence directive Main actions undertaken at European level

  28. Length of train drivers training in weeks

  29. State of Play 1. At European level • Enlargement to take place on 1/05/2004 - Accession Treaties concluded in April 2003. Successful referenda • Second package: EP 1st reading on 14 January 2003; common position of Council 26 June; EP second reading on 22 October 03 • New Commission proposals under preparation • Competition rules (abuse of dominant position, restrictive agreements, state aids) • Revision of TEN guidelines and priority projects and revision of TEN financial regulation (proposal 1st October 2003) • Preparation of EU financial perspectives 2007-2013

  30. State of Play 2. At national level • Implementation of infrastructure package of 2001 by 15 March 2003 • Open access already in D-I-UK-NL-Nordic countries but some more legal work needed in D-UK-S. • Open access still to be concretised in B - F – L -SP particularly • Infringement procedures against 9 countries before the European Court of Justice • Real challenges : setting the various bodies such as regulatory body, independence of allocation body and definition of TERFN. • Interoperability • ERTMS deployment plan and migration strategy

  31. State of Play 3. The players • Infrastructure managers : to prepare network statement and clear conditions for access (cfr. Rail Net Europe) • Railway undertakings : • Historic operators seeking alliances between them or with new entrants to facilitate cross border freight operations (eg. Mannheim-Woippy, Brenner Rail Cargo) • New entrants ( DLC, Rail4Chem, RTC, etc) challenging historic operators on some corridors (North-South, Brenner, etc.) • Improvement of services to be expected soon and better competitiveness against road

  32. State of Play • Customers • Organize themselves to express their needs • European Rail Freight Customers Platform • European Passengers Federation • Supplying industry • Main driver of standardisation activity • Offers more interoperable equipments (eg. Multi current loc, ERTMS, etc) at reduced costs

  33. Conclusions • European Regulatory framework under way : there is a clear vision of all the aspects • A lot of work still to be done • Urgent need of the agency on interoperability and safety • Addressing all types of bottlenecks (short and long term actions needed) • Promoting a dedicated rail freight network • European ERTMS deployment plan for mid 2004 • Investments on infrastructure and rolling stock, particularly in accession countries

  34. For further information: Site: http://europa.eu.int/comm/dgs/energy_transport/index_en.html

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