Skip to main content

MEPs back new rules to boost rail travel

Public contracts to supply domestic passenger rail services in EU countries will have be put out to tender under new rules backed by the EU Parliament this week. Under the new rules, which also aim to boost investment and the development of new commercial services, rail companies will be able to offer their services in EU domestic passenger rail markets in two ways. First, where national authorities award public service contracts to provide passenger rail services, bidding for public service contra
December 16, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Public contracts to supply domestic passenger rail services in EU countries will have be put out to tender under new rules backed by the EU Parliament this week.

Under the new rules, which also aim to boost investment and the development of new commercial services, rail companies will be able to offer their services in EU domestic passenger rail markets in two ways.
 
First, where national authorities award public service contracts to provide passenger rail services, bidding for public service contracts open to all EU rail operators will gradually become the standard procedure for selecting service providers. MEPS believe that inviting bids will sharpen their customer focus and reduce taxpayer costs.

National authorities will also retain the right to award contracts directly, without bidding, but if this method is used it must offer improvements for passengers or cost efficiency gains.
 
Second, any rail company will be able to offer competing commercial services on EU passenger rail markets. However, to ensure that services that member states want to have supplied under public service contracts continue, member states could restrict a new operator's right of access to certain lines. An objective economic analysis by the national regulator would be needed to determine when open access can be limited.
 
Potential conflicts of interest would have to be assessed to ensure that infrastructure managers operate impartially, so that all operators have equal access to tracks and stations.
 
Public service operators would have to comply with social and labour law obligations established by EU law, national law or collective agreements.
 
Rail companies will be able to offer new commercial services on domestic lines from 14 December 2020. Competitive tendering is to become the general rule for new public service contracts from December 2023, with some exceptions.

UTC

Related Content

  • April 30, 2015
    ASECAP conference debates EU’s changes to concessions
    Colin Sowman picks some highlights from a one- day ASECAP Conference about the EU's new regulations on Concessions. ASECAP, the association of European tolling companies, has outlined the scale of the challenge facing authorities and tolling companies in complying with the European Union’s Directives 2014/23/EU and 2014/24/EU in a new report and at a special conference in Brussels.
  • February 10, 2017
    MEPs strengthen vehicle type approval regulations
    In a drive to prevent a recurrence of the VW emissions scandal, the European Parliament’s Internal Market Committee has amended EU car type approval to make environmental and safety testing more independent and strengthen national and EU oversight of cars already on the road. Type approval is the process whereby national authorities certify that a vehicle model meets all EU safety, environmental and production requirements before it can be placed on the market. The proposals would require national m
  • February 12, 2014
    Euro MEPs back plan for automatic 112 call
    The European Parliament's internal market committee has backed EU plans for all new types of car and van to be fitted with automated emergency call devices but opened the door to postponing their introduction beyond the proposed deadline of October 2015. The vote on eCall gives a green light for a pan-European type approval method to ensure the devices meet the necessary technical standards. The decision follows a vote in December in the transport committee to approve legislation for member states to develo
  • July 13, 2015
    Uber takes on European critics
    Uber's director of public policy for Europe, Simon Hampton, has suggested that he sees a chance at winning over governments pursuing legal action against the company. “If you're in a city Uber hasn't come to yet, then creating a group of people to say they want Uber and to put pressure on local politicians - that's hard," Hampton said at a panel discussion in the European Parliament, reports euractiv.com. Uber has faced legal inquiries in the Netherlands, Germany, Spain, Belgium, Italy and Portugal ov