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International Travel Volume in EU (2024)

Comparison of international air travel vs. cross-border train travel within the EU.

Primary Sources

thelocal.com
One trip, one ticket: New EU rules aim to ease train travel

The EU plans to force railway companies operating across the bloc to sell rivals’ tickets on their websites and share data with booking platforms, under new rules that are intended to boost train travel. Brussels said the move, which is fiercely opposed by operators, would make journeys more seamless, helping passengers to find, compare and buy tickets in one go. “Freedom of movement is one of Europe’s greatest achievements. Today, we are taking it a step further by making travel across all 27 member states simpler, smarter and more passenger friendly,” said the EU’s transport chief Apostolos Tzitzikostas. The European Commission wants to improve rail connection across Europe to cut carbon emissions from air transport. But the goal has long rubbed up against a fragmented network broken into national systems that critics say create hurdles and push up costs. Passengers often have to buy tickets from different operators to patch together a multi-country trip. Almost 400 million people travelled internationally by air within the bloc in 2024, compared to about 150 million who took cross-border train trips, according to EU data. To change that the commission proposed obliging rail operators to make their tickets available to all online platforms that want to sell them. Undertakings that hold at least 50 percent of a national market would also have to display on their websites all services run in their country by competitors – and sell the related tickets if clients want them. The Community of European Railways (CER) lobby group slammed the idea as an ‘unprecedented’ regulatory overreach. “I’m not aware of any case where somebody is obliged to sell the product of a competitor. Think about Lufthansa obliged to sell Ryanair,” flights, CER head Alberto Mazzola told AFP. Opposition from operators – often publicly run national champions – could hamper the plan’s chances to become law as it is, as it needs approval from EU member states. Mazzola also argued that firms that invested in their ticketing platforms would have to open them to ‘free-riders’, and the requirement to hand over data would benefit US-operated booking giants, tilting negotiating power in their favour. He added that cross-border rail travel accounted for only about seven percent of train trips in Europe because high-speed infrastructure was not always there, and not because of ticketing issues. The proposal has more support in the European Parliament, which also needs to back it – and prolonged...

thelocal.com
economictimes.indiatimes.com
One trip, one ticket: New EU rules aim to ease train travel

Brussels: The EU plans to force railway companies to sell rivals' tickets on their websites and share data with booking platforms, under new rules unveiled Wednesday aiming to boost train travel.Brussels said the move, fiercely opposed by operators, would make journeys more seamless, helping passengers to find, compare and buy tickets in one go."Freedom of movement is one of Europe's greatest achievements. Today, we are taking it a step further by making travel across all 27 member states simpler, smarter and more passenger friendly," said the EU's transport chief Apostolos Tzitzikostas.The European Commission wants to improve rail connection across Europe to cut carbon emissions from air transport. But the goal has long rubbed up against a fragmented network broken into national systems that critics say create hurdles and push up costs.Passengers often have to buy tickets from different operators to patch together a multi-country trip. Almost 400 million people travelled internationally by air within the bloc in 2024, compared to about 150 million who took cross-border train trips, according to EU data. To change that the commission proposed obliging rail operators to make their tickets available to all online platforms that want to sell them.Undertakings that hold at least 50 percent of a national market would also have to display on their websites all services run in their country by competitors -- and sell the related tickets if clients want them. The Community of European Railways (CER) lobby group slammed the idea as an "unprecedented" regulatory overreach."I'm not aware of any case where somebody is obliged to sell the product of a competitor. Think about Lufthansa obliged to sell Ryanair" flights, CER head Alberto Mazzola told AFP.Opposition from operators -- often publicly run national champions -- could hamper the plan's chances to become law as it is, as it needs approval from EU member states. Mazzola also argued that firms that invested in their ticketing platforms would have to open them to "free-riders", and the requirement to hand over data would benefit US-operated booking giants, tilting negotiating power in their favour.He added that cross-border rail travel accounted for only about seven percent of train trips in Europe because high-speed infrastructure was not always there, and not because of ticketing issues.'Window of opportunity'The proposal has more support in the European Parliament, which also needs to back it -- and prolonged ne...

economictimes.indiatimes.com
politico.eu
Commission pushes to simplify EU cross-border rail travel ... - POLITICO

Commission pushes to simplify EU cross-border rail travel with single-ticket plan New rules would force major rail operators to share ticketing platforms with rivals and extend passenger rights across multi-operator journeys booked in a single purchase.

politico.eu
france24.com
New EU rules aim to ease cross-border European train travel

The EU plans to force railway companies to sell rival firms' tickets on their websites under new rules unveiled Wednesday aimed at streamlining travel on a fragmented rail network that remains ...

france24.com