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

  • Bentley Systems calls for submissions to 2016 Be Inspired Awards
    June 2, 2016
    Bentley Systems, a global provider of software solutions for advancing infrastructure, has announced a call for submissions to the 2016 Be Inspired Awards programme. The deadline for entries is June 10, 2016. The awards, which are selected by independent juries of industry experts, recognise the extraordinary work of organisations that help advance the world’s infrastructure by designing, engineering, constructing, delivering, and/or operating safer, more resilient, sustainable, and intelligent roads,
  • E&E Event in Vienna: Transforming bitumen
    November 25, 2022
    The recent E&E Event in Vienna suggests that decarbonisation, digitalisation and diversification are fast changing the road paving sector, reports Kristina Smith.
  • Pilosio Building Peace Awards event attracts high profile speakers
    November 10, 2015
    Actress Sharon Stone challenged guests at the fifth annual awards in Milan to “build me a school”; they accepted. World Highways was there. What does it take to galvanise people into action to help people in need, especially refugees during a time of conflict – as in Syria now? For some it has been the recent media stories – and distressing images – of the child Aylan Kurdi, a three-year old Syrian refugee whose lifeless body lay face down on a beach in Turkey.
  • PPRS event: Road users’ concerns at the heart of the programme
    December 19, 2014
    Europeans are in two minds about whether their road transport has improved in the past five years, according to the latest European Commission’ Eurobarometer survey and report. According to 38% of respondents, road transport quality had gone up, but 40% said it had dropped, while 18% said there had been no change. Whatever the opinion on quality, 60% of respondents to the report’s survey considered congestion to be the most serious issue facing Europe’s roads. The survey highlighted the dominance o