From the DW:
“Luxembourg makes public
transport free”
Luxembourg has become the first
country in the world to provide public transport for free. The small EU hub
aims to boost tram, train and bus usage and rid itself of traffic jams blamed
on commuters using private cars. Luxembourg Transport Minister Francois Bausch
hailed a "great day" for the Grand Duchy, as it became the first
country on Earth to make public transport ticket free. The small but wealthy nation has introduced
free public transport in an effort to "motivate" residents — and
214,000 daily foreign commuters — to change their behavior in the hilly region
wedged between Germany, Belgium and France. Rides on buses, trains, and trams
were already free on Saturdays but all charges have now been scrapped as the
week closes. Preexisting sales of €2 tickets had amounted to €41 million ($45
million) or just 8% of Luxembourg's annual transport budget of €500 million. Public
transport will now be funded largely via taxes paid into the national budget,
meaning travel savings for private households, especially "low
earners," said Bausch's ministry, adding: "The scheme applies to
residents, cross-border commuters and tourists alike."
Commuters, visitors will benefit too: "You will no longer need a ticket to
board any national bus, train or the tram," proclaimed Luxembourg's public
transport consortium Saturday, adding: "Commuters from neighboring
countries will benefit from reduced fares!" It warned Luxembourgers
however: "Free public transport ends at the border, so you must get a
cross-border pass or ticket if you plan to travel outside of the territory of
the Grand Duchy." Tickets would also be needed for first-class travel on
trains. To end traffic jams, Luxembourg in 2017 opened the first section of its
planned tram service from the capital's southern outskirts to its airport to
the north. And, it's now focused on anticipating travel demand, doubling
"Park+Ride" car parking spaces "especially at borders" and
establishing "cohesive" cycle routes across its 2,586 square
kilometer- (998 square mile-) landscape. Alone for its nascent track network,
four billion euros are being invested over the period 2018 to 2027, to cater
for an anticipated 20% rise in public mobility needs by 2025. That amounts to
€600 per Luxemburg resident per year on rail transport, says the ministry.
Stuck in traffic: A survey done in 2018 by TNS Ilres found
that cars in Luxembourg accounted for 47% of business travel and 71% of leisure
transport. By 2030, its public transport fleet is expected to have
"alternative drive technology," a reference to electric motorization.
Luxembourg, by area one of Europe's
smallest sovereign states but one of four EU seats, including the European
Court of Justice, is staffed by commuters who travel daily from neighboring
France, Belgium and Germany.
Population growth: The 614,000-person dukedom, with
comparatively high wages, is facing strong growth in population. Almost half
are foreigners, including resident Portuguese citizens making up 18%, and
French at 13%. Bausch, a former Luxembourg rail civil servant and member of the
Greens, is also Luxembourg's deputy prime minister in a three-party
liberal-social democrat-greens coalition government renewed in 2018 and headed
by premier Xavier Bettel. In neighboring Germany, Alexander Handschuh,
spokesman for the country's DStGB local bodies association, said Luxembourg's
move signaled a paradigm shift because it was trying "very resolutely with
an all-round concept" to boost public transport.
^ It is all well and good to
offer free public transportation, but you have to make sure that you have an
extensive transportation system that people need and will use. In this case, I
think it will be good for Luxembourg City, but I have no idea about the rest of
the country. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/luxembourg-makes-public-transport-free/a-52582998
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.