Tog­e­ther with the Fede­ral Office of Trans­port (FOT) and the Asso­cia­ti­on of Public Trans­port (VÖV), the VAP Asso­cia­ti­on of the Loa­ding Indus­try has signed a decla­ra­ti­on of intent to auto­ma­te Swiss rail freight trans­port. The long-term major pro­ject will start on 1 Octo­ber 2021 with the pre­pa­ra­ti­on and imple­men­ta­ti­on of the migra­ti­on of the screw cou­pler to the digi­tal auto­ma­tic cou­pler (DAK).

Transport policy fundamentals

Rail freight trans­port should beco­me more pro­duc­ti­ve and com­pe­ti­ti­ve, increase its mar­ket share in over­all logi­stics and ther­eby streng­then the shift poli­cy and the fede­ral government’s 2050 cli­ma­te pro­tec­tion goals. VAP Pre­si­dent and Mem­ber of the Coun­cil of Sta­tes Josef Ditt­li has pro­vi­ded the impe­tus for an imple­men­ta­ti­on and finan­cing con­cept for the auto­ma­ti­on and digi­ta­li­sa­ti­on of rail freight trans­port with his moti­on 20.3221 “Trans­port­ing goods more effi­ci­ent­ly by rail through auto­ma­ti­on”. Par­lia­ment has alre­a­dy appro­ved the motion.

Bringing all market participants to the table

Now the FOT, with the sup­port of VöV and VAP, is working out the basics for the exe­cu­ti­ve. On this basis, the Fede­ral Coun­cil and Par­lia­ment can deci­de on the migra­ti­on to DAK. The VAP repres­ents the needs of the eco­no­my. The indus­try wants to make sus­tainable use of mul­ti­mo­dal trans­port with freight or con­tai­ner tran­ship­ment bet­ween the modes of trans­port accor­ding to their strengths. To achie­ve this, all mar­ket par­ti­ci­pan­ts must be invol­ved. These include not only those respon­si­ble for goods such as che­mi­cals, paper, pulp and wood pro­ducts, cars, con­su­mer goods, food or buil­ding mate­ri­als, but also the cor­re­spon­ding means of trans­port such as freight wagons.

As a remin­der: of 600,000 freight wagons in Euro­pe, 220,000 are pri­va­te­ly owned. These pri­va­te wagons per­form about 50% of the tonne-kilo­me­t­res on the Euro­pean rail net­work. Mem­bers of the VAP mana­ge almost 45,000 pri­va­te freight wagons. Close coor­di­na­ti­on with Euro­pe is essen­ti­al to ensu­re intermodality. 

Taking action with data

The VAP wants to pro­mo­te an effi­ci­ent exch­an­ge of infor­ma­ti­on and data as well as net­work­ed open­ness to inno­va­ti­on bet­ween the play­ers in the rail­way sys­tem along the enti­re logi­stics chain and with the invol­vement of rail freight cus­to­mers, and to (co-)develop cor­re­spon­ding instru­ments. The VAP sees the DAK as a cen­tral ele­ment for the suc­cess of this pro­cess and the­r­e­fo­re focu­ses on the fol­lo­wing topics:

  • Ope­ra­ti­ons: DAK enables both real-time data exch­an­ge and signi­fi­cant­ly more effi­ci­ent ope­ra­ti­ons for freight rail­ways in sta­ti­ons, on sidings and at bor­ders. The most pro­mi­sing tech­no­lo­gy is the one curr­ent­ly adopted by the Euro­pean DAC Deli­very Pro­gram­me EDDP plat­form. The ope­ra­tio­nal and mone­ta­ry advan­ta­ges of auto­ma­ti­on main­ly bene­fit the rail­way under­ta­kings. The invest­ment and fol­low-up costs, on the other hand, fall on the wagon keepers.
  • Costs/benefits: The fair balan­ce of costs and bene­fits must be taken into account in the imple­men­ta­ti­on. Since the con­ver­si­on of the Euro­pean wagon fleet must take place within a defi­ned time win­dow, seam­less finan­cial sup­port is impe­ra­ti­ve. Cur­rent esti­ma­tes assu­me migra­ti­on costs from the screw cou­pling to the DAK of up to 20,000 euros per freight wagon. For the pri­va­te wagon owners of the VAP, this means appro­xi­m­ate­ly 1 bil­li­on Swiss francs. This does not include down­ti­me and trans­port costs to and from the work­shop during the migra­ti­on phase.
  • Data: The DAK is cen­tral above all becau­se of the data that will be available in the future. These are to flow into a super­or­di­na­te and free­ly acces­si­ble data plat­form. Freight rail­ways and cus­to­mers will be able to use this to com­mu­ni­ca­te with each other and obtain infor­ma­ti­on, for exam­p­le about the con­di­ti­on or weight of the wagons, train length or real-time loca­ti­ons of the goods. Such a plat­form will make stron­ger com­pe­ti­ti­on in wagon­load traf­fic pos­si­ble in the first place. In Ger­ma­ny, con­sidera­ble mar­ket shares are alre­a­dy held by pri­va­te freight rail­ways. In Switz­er­land, the frame­work con­di­ti­ons for this deve­lo­p­ment must first be impro­ved. The DAK lays a first mile­stone for this.

FOT, SBB Cargo and VAP give the start­ing signal

On 28 Sep­tem­ber 2021, FOT Direc­tor Peter Füg­lis­ta­ler, Per-Anders Ben­thin (CEO TRANSWAGGON AG) from the VAP and Dési­rée Baer (CEO SBB Cargo AG) and Dirk Stahl (CEO BLS Cargo AG) from VöV publicly pre­sen­ted the decla­ra­ti­on of intent tog­e­ther with indus­try repre­sen­ta­ti­ves. The occa­si­on was a stop of the “Con­nec­ting Euro­pe Express” – a spe­cial train of the EU for the “Year of Rail” – at the con­tai­ner ter­mi­nal Basel Wolf.

Click here for the media release in Ger­man.
Click here for the media release in French.

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