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The Cape Town Convention: International Interests in Railway Rolling Stock. www.railworkinggroup.org. UIC Legal Group Information Session Paris, 19th February 2008 The Rail Working Group View Howard Rosen CBE, MA (Oxon) Principal, Howard Rosen Solicitors, Zug, Switzerland
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The Cape Town Convention: International Interests in Railway Rolling Stock www.railworkinggroup.org UIC Legal Group Information Session Paris, 19th February 2008 The Rail Working Group View Howard Rosen CBE, MA (Oxon) Principal, Howard Rosen Solicitors, Zug, Switzerland Chairman, Rail Working Group
Luxembourg 2007 participants from 42 States and 12 international organizations at the Diplomatic Conference
The Cape Town Convention: International Interests in Railway Rolling Stock www.railworkinggroup.org UIC Legal Group Information Session Paris, 19th February 2008 The Rail Working Group View • Introducing the RWG • Why the Luxembourg Protocol is important • Finding the right balance in the Industry • What the rail industry needs to do
Introducing the Rail Working Group www.railworkinggroup.org • AAE Ahaus Alstatter Eisenbahn The Alta Group Arendt & Medernach Armfelt & Associés Ashurst Aviation Advocacy Bombardier Transportation CIT Comité international des transports ferroviaires (CIT) Community of European Railways Costaferroviaria debis Financial Engineering GmbH Denton Wilde Sapte Deutsche Bahn Deutsche Verkehrs Bank DLA Piper Dresdner Kleinwort English Welsh and Scottish Railway Europe Rail Consultancy Ltd European Intermodal Association European Investment Bank Field Fisher Waterhouse LLP Freehill Hollingdale & Page Freshfields GE Capital Global Capital Finance GmbH & Co. Europe KG Howard Rosen Solicitors HSBC Rail HSH NordbankIntergovernmental Organisation for International Carriage by Rail (OTIF) KfW Kreditanstalt for Wiederaufbau Lenz & Staehelin Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP McCarthy Tétrault Nauta Dutilh NIB Capital Bank N.V. Norton Rose Ober Kaler Private Wagon Federation Rajinder Narain & Co Stephenson Harwood Transnet Trinity Industries UIC International Union of Railways Union of European Railway Industries White & Case Wiersholm Mellbye & Bech
Introducing my mother-in-law www.railworkinggroup.org
Why the Protocol’s important - the Different Stakeholder Perspectives www.railworkinggroup.org • Banks and Lessors • Operators • Manufacturers • Customers • Governments • Aid Agencies
Finding the right balance in the Industry www.railworkinggroup.org • Costs • Liability of Registrar • Insolvency Issues • Reconciling the Public Service imperative • Legacy problems
What the rail industry needs to do www.railworkinggroup.org • Actively support the work of UNIDROIT and the RWG • Educate itself – seminars and articles • Create universal identification systems • Press governments to sign and ratify the Cape Town Convention and Luxembourg Protocol (with the right options) • Be creative
And...remember TINA www.railworkinggroup.org
There Is No Alternative www.railworkinggroup.org
INFRAS/IWW: External Costs in Transportation Road traffic produces on average three times the external costs of rail traffic! Source: INFRAS/IWW Update study on external costs, 2004
Now - Regina Speed: : 110 – 200 km/h Travel time : 0:53 min Energy: 0.10 kWh / pkm* Current Energy use: 0.057 kWh/pkm Early 1990s Intercity trains (5-Wagons) Speed: 110 – 130 km/h Travel time: 1:18 min Energy: 0.12 kWh/pkm* Environmental Effect of rail traffic and how new capital investment makes a difference- Energy Usage Example: SwedenStockholm – Västerås ~50% Energy saving with a clearly shorter travel time ! *pkm = Passenger kilometer
Environment effect of Rail Transport – Energy Use and CO2 Emmissions Energy usage CO2-Emissions With “Green Electricity” CO2 emissions are only 0.006 g/pass-km 11 x 6 x 4 x 7 x
The Cape Town Convention: International Interests in Railway Rolling Stock www.railworkinggroup.org UIC Legal Group Information Session Paris, 19th February 2008 The Rail Working Group View • www.railworkinggroup.org