Exact­ly 25 years after the sig­ning of the “Trea­ty of Luga­no”, the Ger­man rail­way sta­ti­on in the Swiss bor­der metro­po­lis of Basel took stock. For the VAP, in addi­ti­on to the expan­si­on of the line on the right bank of the Rhine, that of the line on the left bank of the Rhine for freight traf­fic is also urgent. Auto­ma­ti­on, in par­ti­cu­lar through digi­tal auto­ma­tic cou­pling, must be imple­men­ted just as quick­ly. Final­ly, the VAP wel­co­mes the pro­po­sed ope­ning up of the EU Com­bi­ned Trans­port Direc­ti­ve to mul­ti­mo­dal trans­port with freight ins­tead of con­tai­ner tran­ship­ment when chan­ging modes of transport.

New agreement

Under the motto “Visi­ting Fri­ends”, the con­trac­ting count­ries con­cluded a new agree­ment that com­ple­ments the Trea­ty of Luga­no and sets new prio­ri­ties. It pro­vi­des for the sus­tainable streng­thening of rail freight trans­port, wants to opti­mi­se its inter­mo­dal com­pe­ti­ti­ve­ness and inten­si­fy coope­ra­ti­on in inno­va­ti­on – espe­ci­al­ly the Digi­tal Auto­ma­tic Cou­pling (DAK) – as well as in the joint pro­ject Shift2Rail. After the spee­ches of the guests Win­fried Her­mann, Minis­ter of Trans­port of Baden-Würt­tem­berg, and Adolf Ogi, for­mer Fede­ral Coun­cil­lor of Switz­er­land, Josef Ditt­li, Mem­ber of the Coun­cil of Sta­tes and Pre­si­dent of the VAP Asso­cia­ti­on of the Freight Indus­try, spoke about the core topics of this anniversary.

Adolf Ogi, for­mer Fede­ral Coun­cil­lor of Switzerland

Securing the access route is necessary

Josef Ditt­li brought in the per­spec­ti­ve of the VAP. On the Swiss side, the VAP con­tri­bu­tes with various mea­su­res to the pro­mo­ti­on of an effi­ci­ent freight rail­way sys­tem. Ditt­li empha­sis­ed the neces­si­ty of exten­ding the rail­way line to the left bank of the Rhine in France in order to secu­re the access rou­tes. With the moti­on «State trea­ty for NEAT access route on the left bank of the Rhine», the NR Com­mis­si­on for Trans­port and Tele­com­mu­ni­ca­ti­ons had ins­truc­ted the Fede­ral Coun­cil in Janu­ary 2020 to seek a state trea­ty with France and Bel­gi­um for an effi­ci­ent alter­na­ti­ve route on the left bank of the Rhine (flat rail­way) with the neces­sa­ry infra­struc­tu­re para­me­ters for freight traf­fic. In addi­ti­on, the expan­si­on of the Rhine Val­ley rail­way in Ger­ma­ny should be pur­sued with vigour. With regard to the new agree­ment bet­ween Switz­er­land (DETEC) and the Ger­man Minis­try of Trans­port, Josef Ditt­li noted that it was well-inten­tio­ned but more like a non-bin­ding decla­ra­ti­on of intent, and deman­ded: «The new agree­ment must not inva­li­da­te the Trea­ty of Luga­no, but should com­ple­ment it.» Josef Ditt­li wel­co­med the fact that France is now pushing ahead with plans to increase the cle­arance gauge in tun­nels on the Réding-Saver­ne sec­tion of the Saar­brü­cken-Basel line via France, as announ­ced by the French infra­struc­tu­re ope­ra­tor SNCF Réseau.

Josef Ditt­li, Mem­ber of the Coun­cil of Sta­tes and Pre­si­dent of the VAP

 
 
The VAP promotes automation and digitalisation

The VAP also advo­ca­tes a vote at Euro­pean level on the issues of auto­ma­ti­on and digi­ta­li­sa­ti­on. With the moti­on «Using auto­ma­ti­on to trans­port goods by rail more effi­ci­ent­ly», it has cal­led for the neces­sa­ry finan­cial resour­ces. And with the Wagon­load Trans­port Inte­rest Group (IG WLV), it is com­mit­ted to the imple­men­ta­ti­on of cor­re­spon­ding mea­su­res tog­e­ther with other play­ers in the economy.

Multimodal transport points the way to the future

For the VAP, it is important to pro­mo­te not only com­bi­ned trans­port in the nar­rower sense, but also mul­ti­mo­dal trans­port with tran­ship­ment of goods. The lat­ter also com­bi­nes dif­fe­rent modes of trans­port and meets the requi­re­ments of the stron­gly gro­wing gene­ral cargo busi­ness in par­ti­cu­lar. The VAP the­r­e­fo­re wel­co­mes the cor­re­spon­ding pro­po­sals of the EU Com­mis­si­on for the revi­si­on of the Com­bi­ned Trans­port Direc­ti­ve. Such pro­po­sals can make a signi­fi­cant con­tri­bu­ti­on to achie­ving the goals of the Euro­pean Green Deal. In Switz­er­land, the volu­me of mul­ti­mo­dal rail freight trans­port is five times hig­her than that of com­bi­ned trans­port. It is no coin­ci­dence that the event was held in Basel; after all, the port of Basel is suc­cessful­ly on the move as a hub for loose goods for mul­ti­mo­dal water/rail transport.

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