Post on 19-Oct-2020
Mobility and
Transport
Symposium
Competition & Regulation
in the Rail SectorDeutsche Bahn AG
Herald Ruijters, Director
European Commission , DG MOVE
Berlin, 25 January 2018
The trans-European transport network
Support implementation of Transport White Paper through new infrastructure policy including:
• Objective methodology led to define a core and a
comprehensive network
• To be achieved by the deadlines of 2030 and 2050
• Including ambitious standards for all infrastructures
• And securing a synchronised implementation with the
help of Corridors and European Coordinators
1
Requirements
• Core network
• Road: express roads or motorways, safe and secure
parking areas, alternative clean fuels
• Rail: ERTMS, electrification, European track gauge
• Rail freight lines: 22.5 t axle load, 740 m train length,
100 km/h line speed
• Alternative clean fuels for ports, inland ports and
airports
• Telematic applications, new technologies and innovation
2
Implementation tools
• Coordinators and Core Network Corridors
• Synchronise investments in order to optimise network
benefits
• Multimodal: road, rail, maritime, air and IWW where
possible
• Involving at least 4 Member States
• European Coordinators for 9 core network corridors and
for ERTMS and Motorways of the Sea
• Work Plans
3
TEN-T Core Network Railway map (freight) Germany defined in Regulation (EU) No 1315/2013 Annex I
5
EU rail investments – key figures
CEF funding for rail
• 2014 – 2016 calls: € 15,646,730,886
• blending call: € 719,448,867
• total: € 16,366,179,752
ERTMS and other rail funding
• Total ERTMS funding: € 1,140,283,106
• Other rail funding: € 15,255,869,646
• total: € 16,366,179,752
7
State of play – CEF funding Germany
• German portfolio is composed of 89 projects selected under the 2014-2016 and 2017 blending 1st cut-off calls.
• German beneficiaries receive €2.2 billion of CEF Transport funding, while the total investment is €6.6 billion (between 2014 and 2020).
• Most of the projects will end between 2019 and 2020.
• €1,743.6 million of CEF funding for a total of 31 German rail projects
8
Key rail projects in Germany I
Upgrade and new build of Stuttgart-Wendlingen line, including Stuttgart 21 (2014-DE-TM-0163-W)
Start date: January 2014
End date: December 2019
Estimated total cost of the action: €1,981,385,584
Maximum EU contribution: €594,415,675
Percentage of EU support: 30%
This Action is part of the Global Project focused on upgrading the Stuttgart rail node (part of Rhine-Danube core network corridor). With converting this railway node rail services in long-distance and regional transport can be significantly expanded and travel times reduced, both on the axis Paris, Strasbourg, Stuttgart, Vienna and Bratislava and within the metropolitan region.
9
Key rail projects in Germany II
Upgraded line/New-build line (ABS/NBS) Karlsruhe-Basel with partial upgrade measures on the existing line (2014-DE-TM-0094-M)
Start date: January 2014
End date: December 2019
Estimated total cost of the action: €828,614,563
Maximum EU contribution: €338,532,745.20
Percentage of EU support: 40.51%
The Karlsruhe-Basel project includes the four-track upgrade of the already existing 2 track line 4,000 (Rheintalbahn). With the two new tracks mainly designed for high speed traffic, a travel time reduction of 31 minutes will be achieved for high speed passenger trains. The two new tracks will be designed for a speed of 250 km/h and mainly be routed parallel to the existing tracks.
10
Key rail projects in Germany III
German rail access route to the Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link: Lübeck – Fehmarn section (2014-DE-TM-0224-S)
Start date: January 2014
End date: December 2019
Estimated total cost of the action: €68,447,500
Maximum EU contribution: €34,223,750
Percentage of EU support: 50%
The Action will establish the essential prerequisites for constructing the German hinterland rail connection to the Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link (planning consent, positive planning approval decision and public call for tenders for work contracts).
11
Key rail projects in Germany IV
ERTMS Deployment on the German part of the Rhine-Alpine Core Network Corridor (2014-DE-TM-0057-W)
Start date: January 2014
End date: December 2020
Estimated total cost of the action: €109,230,948
Maximum EU contribution: €53,720,339.40
Percentage of EU support: 40/50%
The Action covers the preparatory phase and the trackside deployment of ERTMS Level 1 and Level 2, on sections of the Rhine-Alpine Core Network Corridor between Oberhausen and the Swiss border.
Completion of the Action will contribute to the deployment of ERTMS on the German section of the Rhine–Alpine Core Network Corridor and it will improve the cross-border operation with CH. 12
Key rail projects in Germany V Exemplary blending call projectERTMS-DE6400: Interoperable international freight traffic along three TEN-T corridors across Belgium and the Netherlands (2017-DE-TM-0011-W)
Start date: January 2019 (indicative)
End date: December 2023 (indicative)
Estimated total cost of the action: € 12,132,000
Maximum EU contribution: €6,066,000
Percentage of EU support: 50%
The aim of the Action is to deploy ERTMS B3 equipment on existing vehicles already in operation. There are currently 48 existing locomotives of type DE6400, which will be retrofitted with the latest ERTMS baseline version B3. The fleet under DB Cargo is operating today along three core network corridors, Rhine - Alpine, North Sea – Baltic, North Sea – Mediterranean, and will enhance the movements of freight, reduce costs and boost the sustainability of European transport. 13
Mobility and
Transport
Thank you for your attention!
More info:
http://ec.europa.eu/transport
http://ec.europa.eu/invest-eu
http://www.eib.org/invest-eu
https://ec.europa.eu/inea
#InvestEU