The Com­mit­tee for Trans­port and Tele­com­mu­ni­ca­ti­ons of the Coun­cil of Sta­tes (KVF‑S) has con­cluded its deli­be­ra­ti­ons on the total revi­si­on of the Goods Trans­port Act (GüTG). Like the Fede­ral Coun­cil, it wants to impro­ve the frame­work con­di­ti­ons in favour of mul­ti­mo­dal logi­stics chains. Howe­ver, SBB Cargo’s cur­rent beha­viour, with mas­si­ve price increa­ses and a reduc­tion in ser­vices, con­tra­dicts these efforts and puts ship­pers in a dan­ge­rous dilemma.

This is the issue:

  • What has hap­pen­ed so far
  • A clear yes to mul­ti­mo­da­li­ty and competition
  • Con­tro­ver­si­al beha­viour of SBB Cargo
  • The Con­fe­de­ra­ti­on has a duty
  • Tog­e­ther out of the dilemma

 

What has happened so far

We have alre­a­dy repor­ted in detail on the KVF‑S’s initi­al pro­po­sals on the Fede­ral Council’s dis­patch on the Freight Trans­port Act (total revi­si­on of the Fede­ral Act on Freight Trans­port by Rail and Ship­ping Com­pa­nies) in our blog post ‘Now or never: ground­brea­king deba­te on Swiss rail freight trans­port’. As com­mu­ni­ca­ted on 21 June 2024, the preli­mi­na­ry con­sul­ta­ti­on com­mit­tee wants to streng­then com­pe­ti­ti­on in freight trans­port in a tar­ge­ted man­ner, regu­la­te RailCom’s respon­si­bi­li­ty for enfor­cing a non-dis­cri­mi­na­to­ry offer in sin­gle wagon­load trans­port (EWLV) and spe­ci­fy the con­tent of the gui­de­lines for rail freight trans­port as the basis for the EWLV ser­vice agreement.

A clear yes to multimodality and competition

The Coun­cil of Sta­tes Com­mit­tee has now com­ple­ted its detail­ed deli­be­ra­ti­ons. In its latest media release dated 20 August 2024, it calls on the legis­la­tor to sti­pu­la­te in the regu­la­ti­ons that loa­ding con­tri­bu­ti­ons are pas­sed on to ship­pers and reci­pi­ents and that inter­nal com­pa­ny ser­vices are made trans­pa­rent and monitored.Finally, a majo­ri­ty of the com­mit­tee sug­gests that an exten­si­on of the EWLV sub­s­idy should be deci­ded by Par­lia­ment and not by the Fede­ral Coun­cil. In this way, the KVF‑S would like to ensu­re that the finan­cial com­pe­tence and the decis­i­on on a pos­si­ble exten­si­on of sup­port are at the same level

Controversial behaviour of SBB Cargo

Ship­pers’ tem­pers are curr­ent­ly run­ning high over the beha­viour of the SBB sub­si­dia­ry SBB Cargo, which cle­ar­ly runs coun­ter to the efforts of the KVF‑S and the Fede­ral Council’s pre­vious state­ments. The mono­po­ly pro­vi­der demands a surchar­ge of 20% to 60% for its ser­vices – quite natu­ral­ly and wit­hout cost trans­pa­ren­cy or the pos­si­bi­li­ty of redu­cing costs from the sys­tem tog­e­ther with the rail freight ope­ra­tors. Even if the GüTG is amen­ded as pro­po­sed and the Coun­cil of Sta­tes appro­ves the pro­po­sals of the KVF‑S, there is an acute dan­ger that ship­pers will shift their trans­port ope­ra­ti­ons to the road on a large scale. As such a stra­te­gic reo­ri­en­ta­ti­on does not hap­pen over­night, they will adapt their logi­stics con­cepts over the next two years. In this case, both the bill its­elf and the fede­ral fun­ding requi­red for it would be obso­le­te – as would a par­lia­men­ta­ry deba­te on the mat­ter in the 2024 autumn session.

The federal government has a duty

In order to avoid unju­s­ti­fied mar­ket dis­cri­mi­na­ti­on and a shift to the road, ship­pers could also ori­en­ta­te their logi­stics con­cepts towards alter­na­ti­ve rail ser­vices offe­red by inno­va­ti­ve and cou­ra­ge­ous rail freight com­pa­nies and shift their trans­port volu­mes from a state mono­po­ly to mar­ket-based com­pe­ti­ti­on. This would be in line with the aim of the KVF‑S, which calls for more com­pe­ti­ti­on through ser­vice agree­ments and revi­sed gui­de­lines on EWLV. It is the­r­e­fo­re not insi­gni­fi­cant­ly the respon­si­bi­li­ty of the fede­ral govern­ment to initia­te appro­pria­te mea­su­res in the orde­ring pro­cess as soon as pos­si­ble, to invi­te pri­va­te freight rail­ways to sub­mit offers and to sup­port them in their development.

Together out of the dilemma

The indus­try must find a way out of the cur­rent dilem­ma befo­re the deba­te escala­tes. It is now up to the indus­try play­ers and the fede­ral govern­ment to work tog­e­ther to enable more com­pe­ti­ti­on and fun­da­men­tal­ly moder­ni­se the EWLV. To do this, they must work hand in hand to chan­ge the orga­ni­sa­ti­on of the EWLV sys­tem, open it up more to third-party pro­vi­ders and deve­lop it fur­ther on an equal foo­ting. The pri­va­te sec­tor has alre­a­dy come up with some attrac­ti­ve solu­ti­ons. If Par­lia­ment says yes to the pro­mo­ti­on of EWLV and thus streng­thens intra­mo­dal com­pe­ti­ti­on, ship­pers and rail freight com­pa­nies could refrain from defi­ant reac­tions. Ins­tead, they could – tog­e­ther with the SBB – seize the oppor­tu­ni­ty to final­ly break away from the mono­po­li­stic EWLV and deve­lop a self-eco­no­mic, broad-based net­work offer.

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