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Directorate general for Energy and Transport European Commission 22 November 2006 Trans-European transport network (TEN) Policy Sanna KUUKKA
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport2 Content The logic of the extension of the trans- European transport network – 3 phases from 1992 to 2006 European Union of 15 Member states Enlargement of the EU to 27 Member states Extension of the network to countries neighbouring the EU
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport3 l White paper of Jacques Delors - Growth, competitiveness and employment launches the debate in 1992 l Chapter on TENs was introduced to EU Treaty in 1993 (Maastricht treaty) l The TEN Guidelines were first adopted in 1996 aiming at: u Integrating national networks and modes of transport u Linking peripheral regions of the Union to the centre u Improving safety and efficiency of the networks l 14 priority “Essen” projects identified by the EU Heads of State and Government in 1994 were included in the TEN Guidelines Trans-European Transport Network (TEN-T)
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport4
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5 1 st revision of the Guidelines l Decision 1346/2001/EC of 2/7/2001 l Introduction of seaports, inland ports and intermodal terminals l Defining the characteristics and criteria for specific projects and projects of common interest
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport6 2 nd revision of the Guidelines l Background – the new context was analysed in the White paper on European transport policy 2001 u Forthcoming enlargement in May 2004 u Slow progress of priority projects, particularly as regards rail and cross-border sections u Scarce EU funds distributed thinly over a vast network u Increases in demand imbalanced u Slow progress of priority projects particularly regarding rail and border crossings u Investments in MSs insufficient (1%→ 0.8% of GDP) u Co-financing of EU budget not sufficiently concentrated on the priorities
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport7 New elements for the TEN policy l European priorities targeted by focussing investments on priority projects on 30 major trans-national axes l Enlargement facilitated by integrating the networks of the 10 new and 2 future Member countries l Sustainability addressed by giving priority to rail, intermodality and Motorways of the sea l Organisational means improved to facilitate co- ordination of funding and implementation of projects along the major axes l Financial framework adapted to enable concentration and target bottlenecks at border crossings
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport8
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9 Extent of the TEN Network l TEN-T network (EU25, existing and planned) consists approximately of u 90 000 km of roads, u 100 000 km of rail tracks, u 12 000 km of inland waterways, u 400 airports, u 400 international sea ports, u 300 inland ports and u traffic management systems.
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport10 Cost and financing of the TENs l Costs of completing the full network is € 600 billion, of which € 250 billion for the priority projects, by 2020 Sources of funding: National funding remains crucial European funding (TEN-budget, ERDF, Cohesion Fund, EIB) Private sector, direct user contribution – infrastructure charging (railway packages, Eurovignette)
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport11 Extension of the TENs to the neighbouring countries l Aim: To integrate regional exercises u Pan-European Corridors u TRACECA (Corridor Europe-Caucasus-Asia) u Euro Mediterranean regional programme u Western Balkan core network l Tool: European Neighbourhood Policy l Methodology: High Level Group chaired by Ms de Palacio and including the EU27, 26 neighbouring countries and 3 banks
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport12 The High Level Group l Chair of the Group - Ms Loyola de Palacio l Neighbouring countries: Albania, Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Croatia, Egypt, former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Georgia, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya (as observer), Morocco, Moldova, Norway, Palestinian Authority, Russia, Serbia & Montenegro, Kosovo, Switzerland, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey and Ukraine l EU Member States as well as Bulgaria and Romania (EU27) l EIB, EBRD and World Bank
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport13 The Group’s methodology Key for success: agreement upon a clear and rigorous methodology from the outset of the work l Step 1: Criteria for identifying major axes International trade and traffic flows, existing international agreements, regional cooperation and integration l Step 2: Criteria for selecting priority projects Political and financial commitment of country, economic profitability and environmental sustainability
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport14 Liste of horizontal measures The Group analysed in detail 10 horizontal and cross-cutting themes: l Border control and customs procedures l Satellite radio navigation systems l Maritime transport and Motorways of the Seas l Rail transport and interoperability l Inland waterways l Road safety and vehicle dimensions l Air transport l Security l Environment l Financing and public private partnerships (PPP)
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport
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16 3 rd revision in 2010? Need to integrate the regional exercises into a coherent framework TEN of EU27, motorways of the sea Croatia, Turkey, etc? Euro-Med l Commission is preparing a Communication to the Council and the European Parliament before end 2006 l Tool: TEN Guidelines
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Directorate general for Energy and Transport17 Further information l DG Energy and Transport http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/energy_transport/index_ en.html l Trans-European Transport Networks http://ec.europa.eu/ten/index_en.html l sanna.kuukka@ec.europa.eu
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