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Transportation

France Bans Short Haul Domestic Flights in Favour of Train Travel (euronews.com) 216

France has been given the green light to ban short haul domestic flights. The European Commission has approved the move which will abolish flights between cities that are linked by a train journey of less than 2.5 hours. From a report: The decision was announced on Friday. The changes are part of the country's 2021 Climate Law and were first proposed by France's Citizens' Convention on Climate -- a citizens' assembly tasked with finding ways to reduce the country's carbon emissions. France is also cracking down on the use of private jets for short journeys in a bid to make transport greener and fairer for the population. Transport minister Clement Beaune said the country could no longer tolerate the super rich using private planes while the public are making cutbacks to deal with the energy crisis and climate change.
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France Bans Short Haul Domestic Flights in Favour of Train Travel

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  • Private Jets... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Pollux ( 102520 ) <speter@@@tedata...net...eg> on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @12:34PM (#63107912) Journal

    So, will private jets be banned? Summary says...

    Transport minister Clement Beaune said the country could no longer tolerate the super rich using private planes.

    Whoo hoo!

    Article says...

    Despite urgent calls from campaigners, France is unlikely to impose a total ban on jets.

    D'Oh!

    • Dassault is a major manufacturer of private jets so of course they're not going to ban them.

    • And what is the percentage of the problem caused by small airplanes, compared to large airliners constantly on the move? You always go for the biggest offender; there's no other sane option. In the power sector, for example, you go first after coal plants for the same reason.
      • By that logic, if a country has one tiny coal-based power plant and 100 huge gas-based power plants, they should go after the gas-based ones first.

        Private jets may produce less emissions as a sector, but they produce a great deal more emissions per person who benefits. Excluding them makes no sense, except for plutocrats.

    • It means that the super rich can still fly into and out of France but short commutes are not likely to be available like Paris to Nice. But more than likely the super rich will fly more direct routes or stop in a neighboring country to refuel.
  • The French force EU politicians to trek between Strasbourg and Brussels ( and pay them to fly first class, even if they don't fly ).

    Go green by shutting down Strasbourg IMMEDIIATEMENT !
  • Can't wait to see the list of exceptions to the rule. There always are exceptions, and they always include a certain class of people. Like the ruling class. Rules for thee, but not me.

    Just wait.

  • Once you've finished messing about with airport security, wouldn't the train be faster anyway for such short journeys? I suspect that most people already take the train, and this rule would make little difference.

    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      My local airport charges a thousand bucks sometimes to fly customers to San Jose https://www.myflightsearch.com... [myflightsearch.com] here in Santa Rosa California and San Jose is only two hours drive. Seems strange to me as well but people see uses in these short flights.

    • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @01:23PM (#63108110)
      It bans a total of three flight routes. Really just symbolic.
      • The next sentence is intriguing though: "If rail services improve, it could see more routes added including those between Paris Charles de Gaulle and Lyon and Rennes as well as journeys between Lyon and Marseille."

        In other words the law is structured so that rail could poach the market for marginal air routes by making investments to reduce rail travel time - or perhaps even just designating an express route? Whereas without this law, reducing rail travel time by e.g. 20 minutes would have had a marginal

  • by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @01:18PM (#63108082) Journal

    Googling around, it's about 82% the size of Texas. While there are probably some regular commercial flights between far-flung cities within Texas, most Texans just hop in their cars and violate the ever living fuck out of the speed limit to go someplace within the state. Smaller planes may be more common there than ordinary commercial flight, but I still wager that driving is more likely. If Texas had the same population distribution as France, *and* as well developed a rail network, I suspect they would use it. This leads me to wonder who is actually doing all this jetting around France in the first place? I suspect not that many people, and that this is mostly feel-good legislation.

    Sure enough, TFA says this ban initially impacts only 3 routes.

    • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @01:24PM (#63108114)
      There are only three currently-serviced flight routes that will be impacted.
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Googling around, it's about 82% the size of Texas. While there are probably some regular commercial flights between far-flung cities within Texas, most Texans just hop in their cars and violate the ever living fuck out of the speed limit to go someplace within the state. Smaller planes may be more common there than ordinary commercial flight, but I still wager that driving is more likely. If Texas had the same population distribution as France, *and* as well developed a rail network, I suspect they would us

  • by ugen ( 93902 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @02:36PM (#63108320)

    Who would even want to take a flight where a 2.5 hr train ride is available (in Europe anyway)?

    I just took a train from Stuttgart to Paris, about 4 hours actually, but that is town center to town center, no messy security or check in lines, no baggage restrictions, a bigger seat and a lot fewer people. All that was worth $80 (in first class, less than a half in 2nd). Just getting to and from an airport, through security and waiting for checked bags would have taken longer.

    TBH flights this short should not even exist here due to basic economics (but they do, because "low cost" airlines advertise unrealistically low $10 prices, and then charge a lot more to make the flight feasible. Predictably, this old trick continues to work on all those non-mathematically inclined.

    • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

      There is also the small matter that aviation fuel is not taxed which helps.

      That said if you fill a plane and fly it close to it's range it is a very carbon efficient mode of transport. Less so than a train in France though which is pretty green in that respect.

  • by lsllll ( 830002 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @04:11PM (#63108614)
    So, this means I won't be able to book any flights from Chicago on Air France to anywhere in France but Paris, as opposed to getting a connecting flight to Lyon. Now I'll have to navigate the airport and get to the train while carrying two suitcases. You know who this is going to benefit? Every airline EXCEPT Air France, because I bet you I'll be able to get a flight on Iberia from Chicago to Lyon, changing planes in Madrid.
  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Tuesday December 06, 2022 @04:45PM (#63108714)
    If you haven't travelled by high speed rail in the EU, you've pretty much got no idea of what a great idea this law is. I've been around France, Spain, The Netherlands, Germany, & Italy. I've also travelled a lot by plane. Travelling by train in the EU really is the most relaxing, comfortable, convenient, & dignified way to travel & easily the most environmentally sustainable. Travelling by train in the US & Canada? Well, that's a different story.

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