Skip to main content

European transportation award

The 2012 Transport Achievement Award Call for Applications has now been launched in Paris. This forms part of the run-up to the International Transport Forum's 2012 Summit on "Seamless Transport: Making Connections".
April 26, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The 2012 Transport Achievement Award Call for Applications has now been launched in Paris. This forms part of the run-up to the 1102 International Transport Forum’s 2012 Summit on “Seamless Transport: Making Connections”. The 2012 Transport Achievement Award will honour a project, initiative or product that demonstrates how the vision of seamless transport can become reality.

The Award challenges transport operators, service providers, authorities, suppliers and manufacturers from the rail, road, maritime or aviation sectors to demonstrate how they develop new forms of mobility through seamless connections between people, infrastructure and markets.

“The user of transport wants a simple and easy-to-use system where they are concerned only with when to use a transport service, and the points of departure and arrival,” explained Michael Kloth, acting secretary general of the International Transport Forum at the OECD. “In an ideal seamless transport model, the system would provide services, connections and real-time information that result in movement of people and goods with minimal planning and effort. Seamless transport systems is an aspiration that aims to meet user needs by combining various modes, connections and services, with minimal transaction hassle and in a cost-effective manner,” said Kloth.

Applications for the Award are open to all modes of transport: operators, service providers, authorities, and suppliers and/or manufacturers, within International Transport Forum member and observer countries. It will be awarded in the presence of Transport Ministers from around the globe at the International Transport Forum’s Annual Summit to be held 2-4 May 2012 in Leipzig, Germany. The International Transport Forum at the OECD is offering this prestigious award with the support of several key industry organisations.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • José Viegas starts work as ITF secretary-general
    August 20, 2012
    Internationally renowned academic José Viegas of Portugal has begun work as the new chief executive of International Transport Forum (ITF), the global transport policy body. The ITF is an intergovernmental organisation with 54 member countries that acts as a strategic think tank for global transport policy and organises an annual summit of transport ministers.
  • Ministers at ITF agree transport investment is crucial for growth
    May 23, 2013
    Ministers from the 54 member countries of the International Transport Forum are calling for more investment in strategic transport infrastructure and services. “Funding transport is a major challenge for transport policy today. The demand for mobility through high-quality transport networks and services is growing fast”, the ministers stated in a joint Declaration on Funding Transport agreed today during their 2013 Summit in Leipzig, Germany. “Transport infrastructure is much more than asphalt, concrete or
  • US researcher develops congestion busting tool
    May 19, 2014
    Dr Shanjiang Zhu, assistant professor of engineering at George Mason University in Virginia, USA, is the recipient of the International Transport Forum’s 2014 Young Researcher of the Year Award. Dr Zhu was selected by an international jury of experts for his work on choosing the best strategies against traffic congestion. He is being presented with the distinction on 21st May in Leipzig, Germany during the opening plenary of the Annual Summit of transport ministers organised by the International Transport F
  • Ministerial talks at International Transport Forum summit in Leipzig, Germany
    May 22, 2013
    Ministers responsible for transport infrastructure from the 54 member countries of the International Transport Forum at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) were meeting today in Leipzig, Germany, for a three-day summit to discuss the future of funding transport. According to OECD figures, air passenger travel is projected to double, air transport to triple and container handling in ports to quadruple by 2030. Investment needs for transport infrastructure to 2030 are estimated a