May 17, 2025

Fares for English Channel Tunnel Are Too High, Europe Says

Eurostar train tickets between London and Paris are notoriously costly — too costly, European regulators declared Thursday.

The European Commission warned Britain and France, which together regulate the company that operates the tunnel through the English Channel, to curb the high fees assessed on the Eurostar passenger trains and freight haulers.

The two countries must “comply with European Union rules against excessive track access charges for passenger and freight trains in the channel tunnel,” the commission, the bloc’s administrative arm, said in a statement.

Eurotunnel said the process was “targeted at the states and not at the company” before adding that the access charges were “proportional to the cost of the adjacent public infrastructures and more advantageous.” Representatives of the British and French ministries for transport said they followed the rules regarding the tunnel.

Shares in the operating company, the Eurotunnel Group, plunged by more than 12 percent on that news in Paris trading on Thursday.

The commission started to investigate the issue about two years ago, after receiving a number of complaints.

Rail freight companies have said that such charges limited the number of commercial trains they could send through the tunnel, adding to traffic congestion and pollution on the road. Currently, freight trains have to pay a minimum of 3,645 euros (about $4,878) per train.

Eurostar has similarly grumbled about the high costs it pays, which amount to 16.6 euros per passenger (about $21.20) and a reservation fee of at least 4,320 euros per train ($5,781). Those costs, the commission said, push up the price for travelers. The price of standard, one-way ticket from London to Paris on Saturday stood at 193 euros, or $258.

“Freight operators and their customers are being overcharged, and passengers are paying over-the-odds for their tickets,” Siim Kallas, the vice president of the European Commission, said in the statement.

The current price structure, the commission said, was also prohibiting new rail operators from entering the market. Only one rail passenger operator, Eurostar, now uses the tunnel.

Mr. Kallas added that high charges meant that the tunnel was not used to full capacity. The tunnel is carrying only about 43 percent of the traffic it could carry, the commission said.

Brussels also called for an independent rail regulator to monitor competition. The current regulator, the Channel Tunnel Intergovernmental Commission, is not independent because it includes officials appointed by the French and British governments, the European Commission said.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/21/business/global/fares-for-english-channel-tunnel-are-too-high-europe-says.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Today’s Economist: Casey B. Mulligan: The Future of Driving

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Casey B. Mulligan is an economics professor at the University of Chicago. He is the author of “The Redistribution Recession: How Labor Market Distortions Contracted the Economy.”

Driverless vehicles would be a windfall for households and businesses that acquire them but would probably increase traffic and nationwide fuel usage.

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

Google and other innovators are working on vehicles that someday might drive themselves with little or no attention from human passengers. The vehicles of the future will have fast, observant computers that automatically communicate position and road conditions with other vehicles on the road.

Driverless vehicles are expected to help children, the blind, the elderly and others who currently cannot safely drive themselves. Helped by their huge amounts of data and computing power, driverless cars are also purported to reduce traffic congestion and nationwide fuel consumption by driving smarter.

But smarter driving will lead to more driving, because smarter driving reduces the cost per mile of vehicle usage. The end result of additional driving could be more traffic and more aggregate fuel consumption.

These days, a driver has three main costs of the trip to consider: fuel consumption, vehicle wear and tear, and time and attention devoted to driving that could be for something else. (Drivers also need to consider other costs of vehicle ownership, such as the purchase price and the cost of insuring the vehicle.)

Fuel and wear and tear cost roughly 50 cents a mile, which is why employers reimburse employees for job-related personal vehicle usage at about that rate. At an average speed of 30 miles an hour (including stops, traffic conditions and so on), each mile takes two minutes of driver time. For those who value their time at more than $15 an hour, the time cost of the trip exceeds the combined fuel and wear and tear costs.

Research has shown that cutting travel costs through reduced gas prices causes people to drive more, for example by eschewing carpools and public transportation. A driverless car should also cause people to use their vehicles for more miles, because they could use their time in the car to sleep, work, watch television, read a book and do other things they might normally do at home.

Households and business may also begin to use vehicles with no human passengers or drivers in order to move goods from one place to another and, by economizing on the human driver costs, they may want to move more goods than they do today.

As people take on additional activities in their personal vehicles, they may also demand larger vehicles that necessarily require more fuel per mile.

Before driverless cars are adopted, a number of hurdles must be cleared. Some refinements in vehicle technology need to be resolved; insurance companies and state regulators must also figure out liability issues.

Even if driverless vehicles led to more congestion and more aggregate fuel consumption, driverless vehicles would be a welcome technological advance, because the billions of hours that people already devote to driving could be put to alternative uses.

But expect new driving technologies to increase the number of vehicles on the road.

Article source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/24/the-future-of-driving/?partner=rss&emc=rss