• Home
  • News
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA News and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Karmelo Anthony found guilty of murder in fatal stabbing of Frisco student Austin Metcalf

Karmelo Anthony found guilty of murder in fatal stabbing of Frisco student Austin Metcalf

June 10, 2026
Who has the most and fewest judges in the EU?

Who has the most and fewest judges in the EU?

June 10, 2026
These are the world’s best hotel bars, according to Forbes

These are the world’s best hotel bars, according to Forbes

June 10, 2026
Shoppers Say This ‘Game-Changing’ Eye Cream Makes Under-Eyes Look More Refreshed

Shoppers Say This ‘Game-Changing’ Eye Cream Makes Under-Eyes Look More Refreshed

June 10, 2026
Violent transit attacks in Atlanta, New York and Charlotte fuel calls for tougher tracking of repeat offenders

Violent transit attacks in Atlanta, New York and Charlotte fuel calls for tougher tracking of repeat offenders

June 10, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Just In
  • Karmelo Anthony found guilty of murder in fatal stabbing of Frisco student Austin Metcalf
  • Who has the most and fewest judges in the EU?
  • These are the world’s best hotel bars, according to Forbes
  • Shoppers Say This ‘Game-Changing’ Eye Cream Makes Under-Eyes Look More Refreshed
  • Violent transit attacks in Atlanta, New York and Charlotte fuel calls for tougher tracking of repeat offenders
  • South Carolina GOP race to replace Nancy Mace heads to runoff
  • Watch Billy Porter, Wayne Brady & More Rehearse LA CAGE AUX FOLLES
  • America can’t compete with China in AI without these workers, Meta’s president says
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise
  • Contact
US Times MirrorUS Times Mirror
Newsletter
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
 Weather Login
US Times MirrorUS Times Mirror
Home » Is the EU betting on a ‘one-ticket’ plan to make rail like flying?
World

Is the EU betting on a ‘one-ticket’ plan to make rail like flying?

staffstaffMay 28, 20262 ViewsNo Comments
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Pinterest Email
Is the EU betting on a ‘one-ticket’ plan to make rail like flying?

For a generation, €19.99 flights became standard. Companies like Ryanair not only transported people but also reduced perceived distances. Studying abroad became routine, and weekend trips to cities like Lisbon were commonplace. As a result, Europe felt smaller, and the concept of being European evolved.

ADVERTISEMENT


ADVERTISEMENT

Now the Commission wants rail to trigger the same transformation. Not because of prices, but because of comfort.

Brussels presented its “one journey, one ticket” proposal: rules to allow searching, booking, and paying for a multi-operator, cross-border rail journey in a single transaction, with full passenger rights covering the entire trip if something goes wrong.

Brussels is moving with intent. Transport is the EU’s only sector where emissions continue to rise. Sixty percent of Europeans give up on booking trains because the process is a maze, according to Transport & Environment.

“We have half the routes you can fly with no train connection at all,” says Lena Schilling, a Green MEP involved in the parliamentary discussions. “And then we tell people, you can always choose. But the truth is, we are not there yet.”

The failures are basic. Spanish passengers can’t book the direct Paris-Barcelona train on their own app. Vienna-Paris travellers are forced to detour bookings through Germany. These are not infrastructure failures but failures in ticketing and coordination.

The comparison to low-cost airlines is real

Low-cost airlines rewired European mobility, making cross-border commutes, Erasmus exchanges, and weekend trips routine. Relationships, careers, and social lives now stretch across borders as a matter of course.

The Commission is betting that trains can trigger the same psychological shift, not only changing how people travel but also what they believe is possible.

Alberto Mazzola, director general of the Community of European Railway and Infrastructure Companies (CER), says rail operators are making progress and warns Brussels against moving too aggressively.

“In Germany, Deutsche Bahn sold 75% more cross-border tickets in the first three months of this year compared to the same period last year,” he says. “We are delivering. The standard to exchange ticketing data between operators was approved at the end of last year, after four years of work and nearly €1 billion invested across the European market.”

His concern is the proposal’s requirement that operators open ticketing data to third-party platforms.

“Would you oblige every hotel to provide its offers to Google?” he asks. “As soon as a platform becomes dominant, it will set the conditions. That’s what happened with Booking.com. It will ask for higher margins, and that means higher ticket prices.”

The argument reflects a real tension within the proposal: the Commission wants the simplicity of unified booking systems without reproducing the monopolies that have come to dominate online travel and accommodation platforms.

Schilling is unconvinced by the operators’ objections.

“Most train operators receive public money,” she says. “So the market freedom argument is misguided when your product is already funded by taxpayers. Trains are a common good, like roads. The question is what role we want transport to play in our society.”

A ticketing reform alone will not transform European rail

Europe has lost around 12,000 kilometres of railway lines since 1995 while motorway networks expanded. The continent still operates with roughly 30 national signalling systems, different energy networks, and technical standards that complicate cross-border services. Getting a new train authorised for international routes can take years.

“You have the infrastructure, then the trains, then the tickets. You don’t start with the tickets,” says Mazzola.

Schilling agrees that infrastructure investment must follow, but argues that easier ticketing is an essential first step.

“If train prices get cheaper and things are easier to access, more people will use it. That is the idea. It is not just an elitist thing.”

The hardest challenge remains price. On many routes, flights are still much cheaper than trains, especially for younger travellers. Closing that gap requires broader political decisions, taxes on aviation fuel, VAT reform on rail tickets, and greater support for night trains, none of which are in the current proposal.

A “simple” and “appealing” vision

“Right now, I sometimes worry something will go wrong. I am already looking up the next train before I have even boarded,” she says. “In the future, you open one app, search for the connection, buy it with one click, and have full passenger rights for the whole journey. Then, finally, in the best case, you arrive. And if you are not travelling through Germany, maybe even on time.”

The joke lands because the underlying issue is serious: trust. Cheap airlines changed Europe not only by lowering fares, but also by making mobility feel easy and reliable enough for people to reorganise their lives around it.

The “one journey, one ticket” proposal will now move through the European Parliament and Council, where battles over data-sharing and liability rules are expected to intensify. But demand for rail is already there. Trains across Europe are frequently fully booked. The Interrail generation is growing. Remote workers increasingly want to live in one country and work in another. Climate-conscious travellers want alternatives to flying but often encounter booking systems that make international rail feel unnecessarily difficult.

Cheap flights changed Europe by enabling millions of people to quietly adapt their lives to a new kind of mobility. Trains have the foundations to do the same.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram WhatsApp Email

Related News

Who has the most and fewest judges in the EU?

Who has the most and fewest judges in the EU?

EXCLUSIVE: Serbian President Vučić says support for US ‘surged’ under Trump, invites him to visit Belgrade

EXCLUSIVE: Serbian President Vučić says support for US ‘surged’ under Trump, invites him to visit Belgrade

Hungary submits revised EU recovery plan as MEPs demand transparency

Hungary submits revised EU recovery plan as MEPs demand transparency

No, Mbappé hasn’t made sexual harassment allegations against Macron

No, Mbappé hasn’t made sexual harassment allegations against Macron

EU migration rules kick in, but enforcement is already in doubt

EU migration rules kick in, but enforcement is already in doubt

US and Iran exchange fresh attacks as EU unveils new Russia sanctions

US and Iran exchange fresh attacks as EU unveils new Russia sanctions

Bystanders hailed as ‘heroic’ after intervening in brutal knife attack by Sudanese migrant in UK

Bystanders hailed as ‘heroic’ after intervening in brutal knife attack by Sudanese migrant in UK

Spain’s Sánchez speaks out against EU’s deregulation crusade

Spain’s Sánchez speaks out against EU’s deregulation crusade

Iran accelerates execution campaign against anti-regime activists amid internet censorship

Iran accelerates execution campaign against anti-regime activists amid internet censorship

Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest News

Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

January 11, 2021
EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

January 11, 2021
World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

January 11, 2021
Melbourne: All Refugees Held in Hotel Detention to be Released

Melbourne: All Refugees Held in Hotel Detention to be Released

January 11, 2021

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA News and updates directly to your inbox.

Editor's Picks
Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

January 11, 2021
EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

January 11, 2021
World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

January 11, 2021
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
2026 © US Times Mirror. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?