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European Commission

European Commission. Trans-European transport network (TEN) Policy Sanna KUUKKA. 22 November 2006. Content. The logic of the extension of the trans-European transport network – 3 phases from 1992 to 2006 European Union of 15 Member states Enlargement of the EU to 27 Member states

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European Commission

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  1. European Commission Trans-European transport network (TEN) Policy Sanna KUUKKA 22 November 2006

  2. Content The logic of the extension of the trans-European transport network – 3 phases from 1992 to 2006 • European Union of 15 Member states • Enlargement of the EU to 27 Member states • Extension of the network to countries neighbouring the EU

  3. Trans-European Transport Network (TEN-T) • White paper of Jacques Delors - Growth, competitiveness and employment launches the debate in 1992 • Chapter on TENs was introduced to EU Treaty in 1993 (Maastricht treaty) • The TEN Guidelines were first adopted in 1996 aiming at: • Integrating national networks and modes of transport • Linking peripheral regions of the Union to the centre • Improving safety and efficiency of the networks • 14 priority “Essen” projects identified by the EU Heads of State and Government in 1994 were included in the TEN Guidelines

  4. 1st revision of the Guidelines • Decision 1346/2001/EC of 2/7/2001 • Introduction of seaports, inland ports and intermodal terminals • Defining the characteristics and criteria for specific projects and projects of common interest

  5. 2nd revision of the Guidelines • Background – the new context was analysed in the White paper on European transport policy 2001 • Forthcoming enlargement in May 2004 • Slow progress of priority projects, particularly as regards rail and cross-border sections • Scarce EU funds distributed thinly over a vast network • Increases in demand imbalanced • Slow progress of priority projects particularly regarding rail and border crossings • Investments in MSs insufficient (1%→ 0.8% of GDP) • Co-financing of EU budget not sufficiently concentrated on the priorities

  6. European prioritiestargeted by focussing investments on priority projects on 30 major trans-national axes Enlargementfacilitated by integrating the networks of the 10 new and 2 future Member countries Sustainabilityaddressed by giving priority to rail, intermodality and Motorways of the sea Organisational meansimproved to facilitate co-ordination of funding and implementation of projects along the major axes Financial frameworkadapted to enable concentration and target bottlenecks at border crossings New elements for the TEN policy

  7. Extent of the TEN Network • TEN-T network (EU25, existing and planned) consists approximately of • 90 000 km of roads, • 100 000 km of rail tracks, • 12 000 km of inland waterways, • 400 airports, • 400 international sea ports, • 300 inland ports and • traffic management systems.

  8. Cost and financing of the TENs • Costs of completing the full network is € 600 billion, of which € 250 billion for the priority projects, by 2020 • Sources of funding: • National funding remains crucial • European funding (TEN-budget, ERDF, Cohesion Fund, EIB) • Private sector, direct user contribution – infrastructure charging (railway packages, Eurovignette)

  9. Extension of the TENs to the neighbouring countries Aim: To integrate regional exercises Pan-European Corridors TRACECA (Corridor Europe-Caucasus-Asia) Euro Mediterranean regional programme Western Balkan core network Tool: European Neighbourhood Policy Methodology: High Level Group chaired by Ms de Palacio and including the EU27, 26 neighbouring countries and 3 banks

  10. The High Level Group • Chair of the Group- Ms Loyola de Palacio • Neighbouring countries: Albania, Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Croatia, Egypt, former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Georgia, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya (as observer), Morocco, Moldova, Norway, Palestinian Authority, Russia, Serbia & Montenegro, Kosovo, Switzerland, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey and Ukraine • EU Member States as well as Bulgaria and Romania (EU27) • EIB, EBRD and World Bank

  11. The Group’s methodology Key for success: agreement upon a clear and rigorous methodology from the outset of the work • Step 1: Criteria for identifying major axes International trade and traffic flows, existing international agreements, regional cooperation and integration • Step 2: Criteria for selecting priority projectsPolitical and financial commitment of country, economic profitability and environmental sustainability

  12. Liste of horizontal measures The Group analysed in detail 10 horizontal and cross-cutting themes: • Border control and customs procedures • Satellite radio navigation systems • Maritime transport and Motorways of the Seas • Rail transport and interoperability • Inland waterways • Road safety and vehicle dimensions • Air transport • Security • Environment • Financing and public private partnerships (PPP)

  13. 3rd revision in 2010? • Need to integrate the regional exercises into a coherent framework • TEN of EU27, motorways of the sea • Croatia, Turkey, etc? • Euro-Med • Commission is preparing a Communication to the Council and the European Parliament before end 2006 • Tool: TEN Guidelines

  14. Further information • DG Energy and Transport http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/energy_transport/index_en.html • Trans-European Transport Networks http://ec.europa.eu/ten/index_en.html • sanna.kuukka@ec.europa.eu

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