Cologne, Frankfurt and Geneva should appear on the train departure screens from London by 2030, the boss of Eurotunnel has vowed.
Yann Leriche, chief executive of the tunnel firm’s parent, Getlink, says he expects new entrants to start competing with Eurostar – and to double the number of direct rail routes from the UK.
Eurotunnel is the infrastructure operator between Folkestone and Calais. It currently runs the LeShuttle car-carrying operation as well as trains carrying trucks. Freight trains and Eurostar passenger expresses pay for the right to run through the tunnel. Eurotunnel collects €20 (£17) for each passenger on Eurostar trains.
The Channel Tunnel opened to passenger trains in November 1994. In the 29 years since then, Eurostar has had the market to itself. It currently runs from London St Pancras International to Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam.
But at an event ahead of the 30th anniversary of Eurotunnel, Mr Leriche said the tunnel has capacity for more operators – and that new rail links would grow “low-carbon mobility between the UK and Continental Europe”.
Increasing the number of travellers will significantly boost Eurotunnel revenue.
The company has earmarked €50m (£42m) for financial assistance for new entrants between 2025 and 2030. It is targeting cities that have a large existing aviation market from the UK – and which can be reached by direct trains from London in as little as four hours. Three cities are at the top of the list:
- Cologne (4h)
- Frankfurt (5h)
- Geneva (5h30)
A link to Basel and Zurich in Switzerland is also seen as viable.
Mr Leriche said expanding the route network would be achieved by reducing the “time to market” from 10 to five years.
“If you want to start a new rail service, the work has been done,” he said.
Eurotunnel has worked with train manufacturers and rail authorities to standardise new rolling stock in accordance with strict Channel Tunnel regulations.
At present around 12 trains per hour use the tunnel, with scope to increase to 16 per hour and beyond. High Speed 1 (HS1), the link from London to the Channel Tunnel entrance at Folkestone, is currently running at less than half of available capacity.
The main challenge to any new entrant is likely to be space at stations.
Nicky Gardner, co-editor of Europe by Rail, said: “It is not merely a question of platform space for the…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at The Independent Travel…