Skip to main content

German road toll deal ‘paves the way for Europe-wide tolling’

The European Union has finally agreed to Germany’s plan to introduce road tolls, says EurActiv, despite originally saying that the proposals were discriminatory to foreign drivers and would break EU law. Germany will now change its road toll law so that it does not discriminate against drivers registered in other EU countries, German Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt said. However, the plan has met with opposition from Germany’s neighbours in the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria and Denmark. Aust
December 2, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The European Union has finally agreed to Germany’s plan to introduce road tolls, says EurActiv, despite originally saying that the proposals were discriminatory to foreign drivers and would break EU law.

Germany will now change its road toll law so that it does not discriminate against drivers registered in other EU countries, German Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt said.

However, the plan has met with opposition from Germany’s neighbours in the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria and Denmark.

Austria’s Transport Minister Jörg Leichtfried said “the discrimination is now a bit more hidden” but is still there. German social democrats also criticised the deal.

Michael Cramer, German Green MEP and chair of the European Parliament’s transport committee, called the agreement an “unpleasant compromise”. “In the end, only foreign drivers will have to shell out the toll. This is anti-European and will provoke lawsuits before the European Court of Justice,” he said.

Violeta Bulc, the EU transport commissioner said the deal will pave the way for a European-wide road tolling scheme next year and insisted that it will not conflict with her plans to overhaul EU road toll rules early next year. She plans to propose a new law by April to shake up toll rules, digitise toll systems and charge drivers different rates based on how much pollution their cars produce.

Bulc is still deciding between toll rules that are either based on how long cars spend on the road or how far they drive. She has previously said she favours a system that charges based on how many kilometres a vehicle drives and not the number of days spent in a country. Environmental groups have pushed for an EU-wide system that charges based on distance because it could incentivise drivers to use their vehicles less.

Related Content

  • Jenoptik announces toll monitoring first at ITS World Congress
    October 12, 2016
    Jenoptik has entered a new era during this week’s ITS World Congress with the announcement of its first highway toll-monitoring contract. By mid-2018 it will supply global logistics services provider Toll Collect with up to 600 toll payment-monitoring pillars to monitor truck toll payments as part of the planned extension of compulsory tolls for trucks using Germany’s federal highways.
  • Australia’s Transurban to trial road user charging
    March 27, 2015
    Speaking at a major industry forum, Scott Charlton, CEO of Australian toll roads operator, Transurban, said that the country’s major cities risk a decline in liveability without major investment in transport systems and an overhaul of transport funding model. Charlton said that despite significant progress by state governments traditional funding systems were outdated, unsustainable and unfair, and cannot sustain the funding needed to address Australia’s transport infrastructure deficit. Charlton said it
  • Germany considers privatising motorways
    November 15, 2016
    Germany’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble is studying selling a stake of just under 50 per cent in the country's motorways to allow it to develop the network's infrastructure more efficiently, Der Spiegel magazine said on Saturday. Ownership of the 13,000 km network, the world's second largest behind the United States jointly shared between the federal government and the country's 16 states. The Finance Ministry is considering selling off all but a tiny fraction of the latter share, leaving Berlin w
  • Building Europe’s roads for driverless age
    June 17, 2022
    Creating smart, co-operative road transport systems that harness the white heat of technology won’t be easy but a new document shows the way – Andrew Stone does some reading…