FSR-Transport publishes Manifesto for a Post-Covid-19 Recovery Towards Smarter and More Sustainable Transport

Manifesto for a Post-COVID-19 Recovery Towards Smarter and More Sustainable Transport 

In Fall 2019 we published our Manifesto for the next five years of EU regulation of transport as an input for the incoming European Commission, and the Directorate General for Mobility and Transport (DG MOVE), in particular. It contained our ideas and recommendations for how to further advance the Single European Transport Area (SETA).

It is fair to say that, of all the EU policy areas, transport was probably most dramatically hit by the recent COVID-19 pandemic, both internally and across the Member States. But, at the same time, the past three months have also demonstrated how crucial a well-functioning transport sector is for each country and for the EU as a whole. As a matter of fact, transport is foundational for the very functioning of a country and of Europe, be it in times of crises, or not.

Against the backdrop of the pandemic we, at the Transport Area of the Florence School of Regulation, have concluded that our original Manifesto needed updating, not so much in terms of its objectives, but rather in terms of making sure that proposed objectives are not sidelined, rolled back or even abandoned. We remind readers of the EU’s overarching objective – to achieve a decarbonised SETA by making optimal use of both market and funding instruments as well as of digitalisation.

Because of the virus, national priorities have come to overshadow common European interests. These fragmented approaches have thrown us back to pre-SETA times, and sometimes even beyond, and greener modes of transport appear to be less of a priority at the present, especially, if judging by the allocation of State aid, for which the main beneficiaries have been the aviation and the automotive sectors. It is our contention that the original agenda towards a digital and decarbonised SETA remains not only valid, but is needed more than ever before.

In this Post-COVID-19 Manifesto we therefore set out to examine the response to the crisis in matters of transport at this stage and to make recommendations as to how main recovery measures can be turned into opportunities for furthering the SETA.

This Manifesto is structured in the same way as our original Manifesto. In the first part, we will highlight both the threats to an integrated European transportation area and the opportunities that arise from the various recovery measures, which would not only bring it back on track but, furthermore, accelerate it. In the second and third parts of this Manifesto we look at how digitalisation can and should be used to that effect and how decarbonisation of European transport can be further developed, to the benefit of the SETA and in line with the Commission’s European Green Deal agenda.

Read the Manifesto in Open Access.


More on Transport

Moving forward together: What's next for EU Mobility and Transport?
Moving forward together: What's next for EU Mobility and Transport?

Over the past five years, the European Commission has been implementing the ‘Sustainable and Smart Mobility Strategy’. This strategy has served…

Air
Integrating airlines in MDMS
Integrating airlines in MDMS

This article by Vasiliki Christidi, Group General Manager at SKY express, originally appeared in the European Transport Regulation Observer “Aviation and Multimodal…

Air
An ambitious regulatory framework can help unlock opportunities for multimodal travel in Europe
An ambitious regulatory framework can help unlock opportunities for multimodal travel in Europe

This article by Koen Baekelandt, Head of Enterprise Regulations at Amadeus IT Group, originally appeared in the European Transport Regulation Observer “Aviation…

Join our community

To meet, discuss and learn in the channel that suits you best.

scroll

top