25 - 27 January 2005, Hilton Hotel, Berlin, Germany
8th annual event
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Calendar of Events
CEE Rail 2008 ~ Budapest
MetroRail Americas ~ Miami
Rail Turkey 2009 ~ Turkey
Urban Transport World Australia 2009 ~ Australia
EuroRail 2009 ~ Berlin
MetroRail Australia 2009 ~ Australia
Asia Pacific Rail 2009 ~ Vietnam

More events >

Conference programme       


Day One: Wednesday 26th January 2005: Plenary Session
Day One: Conference Stream 1: Passenger operators
Day One: Conference Stream 2: Freight operators
Day Two: Thursday 27th January 2005: Plenary Session
Day Two: Conference Stream 1: Passenger operators
Day Two: Conference Stream 2: Freight operators
Pre-conference workshop: Tuesday 25th January 2005

last modified: 19/04/2005 12:39:51 (GMT)

Day One: Wednesday 26th January 2005: Plenary Session
08.30Registration
 
Friedrich Smaxwill, Chairman,
VDB (German Association of Railway Supply Industry)

THE LATEST EUROPEAN RAILWAY STRATEGIES

 


09.00Chairman's opening remarks
 
Deiter Klump, Vice Chairman,
VDB (German Association of Railway Supply Industry)

09.10Keynote address: liberalisation - a chance for the European railways
  • The rail freight system needs a clear focus on a
    single European market
  • Customer orientation is the best recipe for a strong
    market position
  • Services must be convincing and attractive
  • Cost must come down and processes have to be
    simplified
  • European alliances will help to put railways on the
    right track
 
Hartmut Mehdorn, Chairman, Board of Management,
Deutsche Bahn AG

09.40Keynote address: the European perspective – the third railway package and beyond

The implementation of the third package: the problems incurred

  • Stimulating competition in the European
    international passenger market
  • Can trans European passenger services survive in
    the wake of low cost airlines?
  • The European rail freight industry: how can the
    European Commission ensure open access and
    increase competition?
  • The establishment of the European Railway
    Agency: priorities and objectives
  • The future goals of the European Commission
 
Francois Lamoureux, Director-General, Directorate-General for Energy and Transport,
European Commission

10.10Coffee break
 
11.10Case study: Government control and private sector initiative: seeking the right balance
  • UK railways: the latest Government restructuring
    proposals
  • Who takes control of the railways?
  • Key tests of success: what improvement can the
    industry expect?
  • What does this mean for infrastructure
    investment?
 
Juliet Reingold, Partner,
Simmons & Simmons

11.40Speed networking

Speed networking is an exciting, quick and non-pressurised way to meet fellow conference delegates and industry peers in one 50 minute session. These brief meetings are the starting point for conversation and networking throughout the conference. This is where long-lasting and profitable business relationships begin.

  • Meet…move on…meet…move on…meet!
  • Exchange business cards with fellow
    conference delegates and industry peers
  • The best 50 minute networking session
    you’ve ever experienced
 
12.30Networking lunch sponsored by Angel Trains

Networking lunch sponsored by

Lunch welcome address by

 
Timothy Jackson, Director,
Angel Trains

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Day One: Conference Stream 1: Passenger operators
13.55Chaired by:
 
Murray Hughes, Editor,
Railway Gazette International

PAN EUROPEAN RAIL TRAVEL
14.00Keynote address: how to build competitive high speed rail routes in Europe
  • The French TGV success story
  • European examples
  • Key success factors for the development of
    high speed trains
 
Mireille Faugere, Director Voyages, France and Europe,
SNCF

14.30Panel session: fighting the low cost airlines - is there a future for international rail travel?
  • Panel session: fighting the low cost airlines - is there a future for international rail travel?
  • The current status of trans European rail travel
  • Generating interest in rail travel and increasing market share
  • Establishing an edge over low cost airlines, offering an efficient and competitive alternative
  • What is the railway industry’s unique selling point and how do you deliver it to the customer? The issue of branding and marketing
  • Understand the needs of the 21st century traveller, know your customer
  • Modernisation and technological innovation: investment versus profit 
  • Is long distance rail travel a long-term sustainable and profitable business venture?
 
Enrico Trapazzo, Director of the International Department of the Passenger Division,
Trenitalia
Nol Döbken, Managing Director,
High Speed Alliance

15.30Coffee break
 
KNOW YOUR CUSTOMER
16.15Panel session: exceeding the demands of today’s rail customers
  • Establishing what is important to your
    customers
  • Is the ultimate customer concern the price?
  • Orientating your business model to best suit
    these needs
  • Delivering improved service at a competitive
    price
  • The impact of new customer facing
    technologies – the latest innovations
  • Increasing overall net profit versus increasing
    customer service: the ultimate conundrum
 
Jan Forsberg, CEO,
SJ
Anton Valk, Managing Director,
Ned Railways
Ian Brown, Managing Director of London Rail,
Transport for London

17.15Case study: delivering a 21st century railway
  • Breaking the mould: transforming innovation
    into profitable initiatives
  • Achieving sustainable growth and increasing
    market share
  • Understanding your customer expectations
  • Delivering a customer focused service
  • Meeting the needs of public stakeholders and
    investors
 
Keld Sengeløv, Chief Executive Officer,
DSB

17.45Close of day one followed by networking cocktail reception

 

 
19.30Networking EuroRail dinner

 

 
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Day One: Conference Stream 2: Freight operators
13.55Chaired by:
 
Tony Berkeley, Chairman,
Rail Freight Group (UK)

14.00Chairman’s opening presentation: developing a thriving rail freight industry
  • An assessment of the current state of the rail
    freight market
  • Is enough being done across Europe to
    promote liberalisation and to ensure
    competition?
  • How is the industry going to compete
    effectively against the alternative methods of
    delivery?
  • The need to improve service quality and
    customer satisfaction
  • The way forward and the future for the rail
    freight industry
 
Tony Berkeley, Chairman,
Rail Freight Group (UK)

A VISION FOR THE FUTURE OF RAIL FREIGHT
14.30Panel session: fighting back against road haulage and alternative methods of delivery
  • Combating the decline in market share – can
    rail freight survive?
  • Expanding your rail freight business through
    acquisition and partnering
  • Providing a greater number of services to
    customers
  • Breaking down the barriers, the need to
    ensure fast and effective travel across national
    borders
  • Establishing innovative solutions to promote
    interoperability
  • Intramodal competition: the last chance for rail
    freight transport?
 
Hans-Peter Hadorn, Director,
SBB Cargo
Bernhard Kunz, Managing Director,
Hupac
Christian Kuhn, CEO,
Connex Cargo Logistics
Ferdinand Schimdt, Executive Director,
ÖBB

15.15Coffee break
 
CUSTOMER ORIENTATION STRATEGIES
16.00Panel session: going the extra mile – ensuring customer satisfaction
  • Understanding your customer’s priorities:
    injecting customer-focused strategies into your
    business model, is the ultimate customer
    concern the price?
  • Bringing the rail freight industry into the 21st
    century: creating an ability to adapt quickly to
    your customer's requirements
  • The need for innovation: staying one step
    ahead of the competition
  • Increasing overall net profit versus increasing
    customer service: the ultimate conundrum
  • Promoting the rail freight sector: removing the
    preconception of rail freight as a second class
    alternative
 
Jan Sundling, CEO,
Green Cargo
Christian Thing, Managing Director,
Railion Denmark
Dirk Stahl, CEO,
BLS Cargo
Dick van den Broek Humphreij, Chairman,
European Shippers Council

16.45Case study: the customer’s perspective – what we want and when we want it!
  • Room for improvement: where rail freight is
    falling short in comparison to its competitors
  • The main priorities of the customer: speed,
    flexibility and reliability
  • How the industry can meet these requirements
  • Ensuring effective cooperation between
    customer and supplier
  • Can rail freight compete effectively: the
    customer’s view
 
Georges Di Lallo, President,
European Rail Freight Customers Platform

17.15Close of day one followed by networking cocktail reception
 
19.30Networking EuroRail dinner
 
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Day Two: Thursday 27th January 2005: Plenary Session
08.30Registration
 
08.50Chairman’s opening remarks
 
Colin Hall, Deputy Executive Director,
Community of European Railway and Infrastructure Companies

09.00Keynote address: meeting the requirements of 21st century European rail travel
  • The need to provide a 21st century railway network
    across Europe
  • The priorities for rail infrastructure investment
  • Ensuring the optimum balance between quality,
    safety and profit
  • Evaluating the financial options for infrastructure
    enhancement
  • Achieving strategic focus through budget planning
    and prioritisation
  • The future for DB Netz: the problems and the
    solutions on a national and pan European scale
 
Roland Heinisch, Chairman of the Board of Management,
DB Netz

REVITALISING THE RAILWAY NETWORK
09.30Keynote address: European infrastructure managers: recent achievements in the field of European cooperation
  • Europtirail, a new IT system for real-time
    international traffic management
  • Pathfinder and RNE, the new international
    timetable process
  • ERTMS migration on international corridors
 
Jean-Marie Bertrand, Director General, RFF, Chairman,
European Infrastructure Managers Association

10.00Coffee break
 
10.45Panel session: the fast track to an effective European rail network
  • What is the future for infrastructure ownership?
  • Formulating strategic partnerships in infrastructure
    operations
  • Establishing effective cooperation with operators
    to deliver a more efficient railway
  • Infrastructure investment: key priorities and
    strategies for implementation
  • Cutting costs: exploring the role of the contractor
  • The infrastructure manager’s role in the
    liberalisation of the industry
  • Ensuring open access and promoting competition
 
Ossi Niemimuukko, Director General,
Finish Rail Administration
Joachim Kroll, Secretary General,
RailNetEurope
Julian Smith, Partner, Corporate Finance - Transport,
PricewaterhouseCoopers

11.30Case study: ERTMS/ETCS migration in Austria
  • Operational and technological context
  • ÖBB rationale and motivation
  • Migration preparation / pilot initiatives
  • Commercial realisation - project implementation
  • Summary and outlook
 
Helmut Steindl, Head, System and Signalling Technology,
ÖBB
Alfred Veider, General Manager, Transport Solutions Division Austria,
Alcatel

12.00Case study: customer demand in public services, how can IT help?
  •  The change to a customer driven service-delivery
    process
  • Customer relationship management in a new
    perspective (beyond the hype)
  • The importance of the moment of contact and the
    role of the service-agent
  • Who manages who: the real-time exchange of
    value between customer and company
  • The tension between flexibility and stability in
    service-delivery
 
Michiel C.J. Van Roozendaal, Managing Director,
NS Internationaal

12.30Networking lunch sponsored by LEK Consulting

Networking lunch sponsored by:

Lunch welcome address by

 
Andrew Allum, Partner,
LEK Consulting
Chris Stokes, Non Executive Board Member,
Office of Rail Regulation

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Day Two: Conference Stream 1: Passenger operators
13.55Chaired by:

 
Adrian Lyons, Director General,
The Railway Forum

FINANCING AND INVESTMENT IN THE PASSENGER INDUSTRY
14.00Panel session: delivering growth in the rail industry
  • Understanding the objectives of the players
    involved in investment: governments,
    operators, infrastructure authorities,
    contractors and banks
  • Attracting sufficient financing: types of
    financing structures
  • Driving down costs in the passenger market
    and improving efficiency
  • Enhancing the procurement system across the
    network
  • Implementing an effective system of rolling
    stock renewal and maintenance
  • Determining future trends in rail investment
 
Claire Dreyfus-Cloarec, President,
SNCF Participatons
Vincenzo Soprano, Director,
Ferrovie dello Stato
Reto Feissli, Group Treasurer,
SBB
Timothy Jackson, Director,
Angel Trains

15.00Case study: running an efficient and profitable passenger operation
  • The benefits of a privately managed operation
  • Running a profitable business – profit versus
    performance
  • Restructuring your business to optimise
    revenue and profit
  • Long-term investment strategies and planning
 
Hans Leister, Managing Director,
Connex Verkehr GmbH (Germany)

15.30Coffee break
 
16.15Case study: European passenger traffic forecasts 2020
  • Passenger flows in the basis year 1999
  • Scenarios for 2020 (hypothesis)
  • Passenger flows 2020 (basic scenario)
  • Effect of the extension of the Western Europe
    high speed network to PL and CZ
  • Effects on the investment patterns and
    investment priorities
 
Gunther Ellwanger, Director, Economics, Finance and Environment,
UIC

EUROPEAN RAILWAY SAFETY
16.45Panel session: understanding the task facing the rail industry across Europe
  • Ensuring rail policy is no longer centred on
    national considerations and instead directed
    towards the needs of passengers
  • Providing a common approach to rail safety
  • The need to ensure high safety standards in
    the wake of an increase in operators due to
    market liberalisation
  • Establishing a harmonised format for safety
    certificates
  • Increasing the level of interoperability on a
    European scale in order to ensure technical
    and operational harmonisation
  • Developing a system of information exchange
    and creating a genuine European railway
    culture
 
Berend Klerk, CEO,
ProRail
Len Porter, Chief Executive,
Rail Safety and Standards Board
Antonio Lagana, "Director of the Safety System Directorate,
Trenitalia

17.45Close of conference

 

 
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Day Two: Conference Stream 2: Freight operators
13.55Chaired by:

 

 
Heiner Rogge, Chariman, Rail Committee,
CLECAT (European Association for Forwarding, Transport, Logistics and Customer Services)

LIBERALISATION AND COMPETITION
14.00Panel session: increasing competition and liberalising the European railways
  • Establishing a method of open access across
    national borders
  • Towards interoperability: equipping the
    network with European standard safety and
    regulation systems
  • Train path allocation issues: the trans European
    rail freight freeway network
  • Giving the customer the freedom to choose
  • Ensuring an effective means of separating
    operations and infrastructure
  • Opening the European market to more
    operators
  • Infrastructure charges: establishing a fair and
    efficient pricing structure
 
Hans-Peter Hadorn, Director,
SBB Cargo
Albert Counet, General Manager,
B-Cargo
Olaf Krüger, Senior Vice President and Chairman of the Executive Board,
Kühne + Nagel Management AG and Interessengemeinschaft der Bahnspediteure e.V. (Railforwarding Syndicate)
Emilio Fernandez, President,
Transfesa

15.00Case study: fighting back against the incumbent operators
  • Ensuring fair and efficient competition in the
    European rail freight market
  • The benefits to rail operators and their
    customers
  • Establishing an effective system of
    cooperation between infrastructure managers
    and rail operators
  • Removing the problem of crossing borders:
    providing a total service
  • The need to expand beyond the limits of
    purely rail freight
  • Responding to the growing needs of
    customers: providing a “bundle of services”
 
Matthias Raith, General Manager,
Rail4chem

15.30Coffee break
 
TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION
16.15Panel session: bringing the rail freight industry into the 21st century
  • What are the key areas of development: where
    does the industry need to invest?
  • The expansion of the European Community
    and its impact on the need for development
  • Can the current infrastructure networks cope
    with the planned level of modernisation?
  • Streamlining pan European travel: enabling fast
    and effective cross border journeys through
    improved technology
 
Luca Ronzoni, Managing Director,
Ferrovie Nord Cargo
Keith Heller, Chief Executive,
English Welsh and Scottish Railway
Walter Schulze-Freyberg, Managing Director,
Polzug

17.15Case study: an operator’s perspective on technological developments
  • Our short-term problems and the solutions we
    require
  • Planned investment and procurement
    strategy
  • Projected problems in the long-term: what are
    we going to require to meet the strategic
    issues of the future?
  • The need to work effectively with suppliers to
    establish effective development
 
Walter Schulze-Freyberg, Managing Director,
Polzug

17.45Close of conference
 
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Pre-conference workshop: Tuesday 25th January 2005
10.00Registration and coffee
 
10.30Opening of the workshop: the objectives of the workshop are to:
  • Identify ways to accelerate progress with delivering TEN-T
  • Help delegates to recognise how the packaging of the relevant project can be critical to attracting funding
 
10.45Issues and obstacles faced
  • Objectives of TEN-T – why is the Commission promoting it?
  • Scale of funding required
  • Funding available from the EU
  • Why has TEN-T been slow to be implemented?
  • Coordinating projects in adjacent countries
  • The implications for TEN-T of the new member states
  • How should infrastructure companies be prioritising their efforts
 
11.30Case studies: involving experts representing specific projects who will review the financing structures used on a number of completed and well-progressed infrastructure projects
  • Perpignan – Figueras: recently completed PPP procurement
  • Spencer Street station: complex development in Melbourne procured using a PPP
  • Dutch HSL project: major TEN-T project currently being procured using a PPP structure
 
12.30Lunch
 
14.00The key challenges in implementing TEN-T projects
  • The long term nature of projects
  •  Working with national/ regional governments (timescales and
    delivering results)
  • Obtaining finance
  • Use of PPP structures
  • Balance sheet issues and shareholders considerations
  • Overcoming the challenges of cross-border projects/dependencies
  • Co-ordinating with other national railways
 
14.40Sources of finance
  • Sources of finance
  • Which risks can be financed by the private sector
  • Which risks will be left with the public sector
  • How benefits of private funding offset the incremental cost
 
15.20Legal considerations in arranging finance for projects
  • Legal issues relating to output specified projects
  • Legal obstacles to project finance for enhancement projects
 
15.20Closing panel session: chaired by Julian Smith of PricewaterhouseCoopers and involving all the presenters
  • This session will give the opportunity for the audience to test ideas and better understand specific points and issues
 
16.00Coffee break
 
16.40Financiers concerns
  • Understanding of the project
  • Deliverability of the project
  • Assessment of demand for the asset and ability of the borrower to pay
  •  Valuing the underlying security and other forms of guarantee
  • Revenue forecasts
  • Risk allocation, management and mitigation
  • Involvement of rating agencies and insurers
 
18.00Close of workshop

 

 

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