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Railway Policy in the EU 02 October 2013, Budapest

Railway Policy in the EU 02 October 2013, Budapest. Dr. Libor Lochman CER Executive Director. CER – Representing European railways in Brussels. CER stands for…

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Railway Policy in the EU 02 October 2013, Budapest

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  1. Railway Policy in the EU 02 October 2013, Budapest Dr. Libor Lochman CER Executive Director

  2. CER – Representing European railways in Brussels CER stands for… • The Community of European Railway and Infrastructure Companies brings together railway undertakings and infrastructure companies from the European Union, Norway and Switzerland, the EU candidate countries as well as from the Western Balkan countries • CER is based in Brussels and represents the interests of its members to the European Parliament, Commission and Council of Ministers as well as other policymakers and transport actors • CER’s main focus is to to support an improved business and regulatory environment for European railway and railway infrastructure companies.

  3. What CER represents… CER represents 80 member companies (23% privately owned), incumbents and new entrants, passenger and freight operators, integrated and separated infrastructure managers. CER does not only represent the incumbent and system operators’ perspective but the largest membership of rail industry actors throughout Europe including service providers and a large number of independent infrastructure managers. Break-down of integrated and non-integrated CER companies Break-down of non-integrated CER companies

  4. CER interlocutors Council European Commission European Parliament e.g. AAR, CIT, EIM, OSJD, OTIF, RNE, RŽD, UIC, UNIFE, X-Rail, et al. ERTMS corridors European Railway Agency TEN-T Agency World Bank, EIB, UNECE et al. … ERRAC Social Dialogue

  5. The EU rail acquis

  6. The EU rail acquis (1) International freight market opening Accounts separation Establishment of RB Compulsory NSs MACs Opening int’l and domestic freight mkt Establishment of ERA 1st Railway Package 2nd Railway Package 3rd Railway Package Inter-operability directives Opening int’l passenger market Rail passenger rights Certification of train drivers Working conditions of cross-border mobile workers The Trans-European Network Public Service Transport State Aid Guidelines Environ-mental legislation Public procure-ment Safety directive (revision) Environmental noise Diesel emissions Environmental liability

  7. The EU rail acquis (2) • Reinforced accounts separation • Independence of IM’s essential functions • Longer and stronger MACs • New principles for TACs • NDTACs and ETCS TACs • Access to Rail Related Services Rail freight corridor regulation Passenger rights on all modes Euro- vignette Recast of the 1st railway package State Aid Guidelines New TEN-T and CEF 4th Railway Package • Governance of the rail companies • Domestic rail market opening • New ERA regulation • Interoperability • Safety

  8. Setting the conditions right:the rail system as it should be as a result of the Recast of the First Railway Package

  9. The rail system: input, output and regulatory monitoring 1 PUBLIC AUTHORITY € € 3 2.2 MACs Rail RB Rail RB Rail RB € Infrastructure Manager Infrastructure Manager Public sphere Track Access Charges Road Access Charges Access to infrastructure Road system Railway system Infrastructure € € 2.1 Operators Operators PSCs 4 € € Priva te sphere CUSTOMERS

  10. Establishing the right public bodies and ensuring investments 1 • For the satisfaction of the customers - passenger or freight forwarders - States must guarantee an efficient functioning of the system • Establishing a Rail Regulatory Body • Establishing a Safety Authority • Ensuring good quality for both the rail network and the rolling stock of SOEs • Bearing in ming that the rail network (as the road network) relies on the availability of public money!

  11. Public Service Contracts: undercompensation in CEE & SEE 2.1 • Public Service Contracts must be stipulated on a commercial basis and remunerated according to the agreed terms! Source: ITF/OECD

  12. Multi Annual Contracts 2.2 • States must stipulate Multi Annual Contracts (at least 5-year long) with the infrastructure managers • To guarantee solid financial basis for maintenance and operations • To guarantee a medium-term horizon to plan new investments • To guarantee that profit and loss accounts balance incomes with expenditure

  13. Fair intramodal competition 3 • States must make sure to put in place an institutional framework which preserve a fair intramodal competition • Adequately staffing the Rail Regulatory Body • Guaranteeing the independence of the essential function of the infrastructure managers: path allocation and infrastructure charging

  14. Fair intermodal competition 4 • States must make sure to put in place an institutional and legal framework which preserve a fair intermodal competition • Putting enough resources at disposal, and in a fair way • Establishing a fair policy of charging for the access to respective networks • Making sure each modes‘ costs reflect all negative externalities

  15. The Fourth Railway Package

  16. 4RP – The three main components of the intramodal competition 1 Additional competences for ERA • on authorisation for putting rolling stock in place • on safety certification for railway undertakings 2 Opening the domestic rail passenger market • will define minimum scope of open access and maximum scope for PSO • will propose compulsory tendering of PSO with only limited exceptions 3 Railways’ organisational structures • Universal imposition of separation • Transitional period where Annex V type of criteria shall be respected • Separate board members for holding and daughter companies • Long cooling-off periods for board members entrusted with the management of essential functions • New conditions for appointment of management board of essential functions • Consultative body of infrastructure users to be established • Network of infrastructure managers to be established • IMs to be reinforced, always covering the functions of infra development, maintenance, operations, marketing and charging

  17. Interactions between open access services and Public Service Obligations: a careful balance • Open access should apply on the entire network in every EU Member State, provided that PSO economic equilibrium is preserved • Where open access and a PSO overlap on the network, States may take measures to safeguard the economic equilibrium of the PSO • Conversely, open access operators should also be protected – e.g. where a new PSO is created or the scope of an existing PSO is extended • Bundling of viable and non-viable services into single PSO/franchise contracts must remain possible for efficiency reasons • Ensuring that national Regulatory Bodies have all means to fulfil their responsibilities, also by a better coordination at EU level • Financial architecture of national rail sectors must improve • Social conditions must be addressed • Deepening technical alignment between national rail sectors And:

  18. CER view: the structural models Efficient, non-discriminatory access to infrastructure – a major enabler of competition in the rail sector • Can be achieved with a well-financed and independent regulatory body • Allow efficient structural models to support competitivenessagains other modes • Both integrated and separated models can perform •  confirmed by the recent EVES-Rail study results ! New legislation only if seen necessary for the development of the European railway market after a thorough analysis • Each Member State should be empowered to • reconsider its existing rail sector model • have sufficient flexibility to reform the given model • switch between models, if national conditions so require

  19. Structural organisation and market entry source: EVES-Rail study Many factors affect the % of new entrants – vertical separation is NOT one of them

  20. Recent pieces of legislation:TEN-T and CEF

  21. Final results on the “technical standards” Technical standards on the Comprehensive Network: • Compliant with INF TSI • Full electrification • ERTMS Technical standards on the Core Network: • Same standards as comprehensive network plus: • 22.5t axle load, 100km/h line speed, • 740m freight train length, nominal track gauge of 1435mm • Isolated networks excluded from the above requirements • Additional exemptions possible in duly justified cases

  22. Final results on the “deadlines” Comprehensive Network: Member States „shall make all possible efforts“ to complete the comprehensive network by 2050 Core Network: Member States „shall take the appropriate measures“ to complete the core network by 31 December 2030 (legally binding) • Council was successful in introducing more flexibility depending on the financial situation of each Member State

  23. TEN-T map of Hungarian corridors

  24. Modal distribution of rail vs road infra investments in Hungary Source: ITF 2013

  25. Something to take of:The intermodal level playing field

  26. Intermodal level playing field?Cross-modal regulation needed! • Improve law-making to ensure a fair intermodal legislative framework • Set up cross-modal legislative principles • Common principle for infrastructure charging • Common principle for internalization of negative externalities • Common principle for taxation • Common principle for passenger rights • Common social standards • …

  27. Infrastructure charges: all modes should be put on a level-playing field • Rail transport is energy-efficient & a low generator of CO2 emissions but infrastructure charges for rail are much higher than road infrastructure charges (which are sometimes inexistant) • Measures to lower rail infrastructure charges or introduce road tolls have had a positive effect on rail freight traffic • Positive examples: UK, Denmark, Netherlands, Sweden, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Switzerland • Recommendation: ensurealignmentbetween road & rail infrastructure charges for freight

  28. External costs: importance of assessing the true cost of transport • Currenttransport prices do not reflect the truecost of transport • Competitionbetween modes isdistorted • Consequences on modal preferences are dramatic, sincepriceis the most important parameter for freightcustomer • Recommendation: fully internalise the externalcosts of transport by applying the ‘polluter pays’ principle, coveringcostsgenerated by accidents, CO2 emissions and congestion.

  29. All three key elements of the sustainable rail development must always be promoted! Infrastructure Intermodal level playing field Intramodal competition

  30. Dr. Libor Lochman CER Executive Director Tel: +32 2 213 08 71Email: libor.lochman@cer.be  For further information, visit our website: www.cer.be  Thank you for your attention!

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