Skip to main content

Road transport: IRU/ETF demand action

The International Road Transport Union (IRU) and the European Transport Workers Federation (ETF) are calling for urgent action on road transport. As EU Social Partners for Road Transport, both organisations agreed a joint statement and this includes six measures which they insist, as a minimum, must form part of an urgently-needed road transport recovery plan to be coordinated and realised by the European Commission together with EU Member States.
July 9, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Urgent action needed: in recent months falls of up to 50% in road freight transport activity have been observed
The 1203 International Road Transport Union (IRU) and the European Transport Workers Federation (ETF) are calling for urgent action on road transport.

As EU Social Partners for Road Transport, both organisations agreed a joint statement and this includes six measures which they insist, as a minimum, must form part of an urgently-needed road transport recovery plan to be coordinated and realised by the 2465 European Commission together with EU Member States.

Michael Nielsen, IRU general delegate to the EU said: "This is a landmark joint message from workers and employers in road transport. The road transport sector has been hit hard by the recession and we need concerted action to get through this time of crisis.

"In recent months falls of up to 50% in road freight transport activity have been observed, while a 10% drop in world tourism is now severely impacting coach transport. Bankruptcies have doubled and at least 140,000 jobs in the EU road transport sector have gone.

"The Social Partners recognising road transport's pivotal role in the economy, and as a massive supplier of European jobs, call on national and EU authorities to cease talking and start putting in place some urgently needed and concerted actions to mitigate the impact the crisis has had on the road transport sector."

Concretely, the Social Partners insist that EU Member States and the EC must urgently do more to encourage financial institutions to reopen credit lines to road transport companies; adopt employment schemes enabling skilled labour to stay in road transport rather than lose their jobs, and reduce fuel costs and stop adding other external charges.

The organisations say there is a need to ensure through the provision of incentives that the crisis does not stop company investments in training or stop such investments in newer, cleaner and safer vehicles, and there is the need to reinvest more than ever in infrastructure (including safe parking facilities) to stem the flow of unnecessary costs incurred from congestion and crime.

"We need to see the European Commission assume the leadership role that it claims," Michael Nielsen added. "Now is the time for the EC to match aspirations with actions and to demonstrate an ability to act when it counts.

"Together with national governments it must implement a recovery plan without delay fulfilling all the points outlined by the Road Transport Social Partners as well as the actions called for previously by the IRU in its Resolution on the economic crisis."

The IRU and the ETF maintain that an EU road transport recovery strategy is a pre-requisite for a general economic recovery because every citizen needs mobility and every company needs road transport services to connect their businesses to world markets.

The Social Partners for Road Transport say they are united behind one message: that any penalty on road transport is an even greater penalty on the economy as a whole, and that further facilitating road transport will stimulate a faster economic recovery.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Transport under the spotlight
    February 13, 2012
    A round-up of some of the major transport-related meetings that have been held in Europe. Compiled by Patrick Smith. Europe has hosted a number of annual events over the last few weeks, where important matters of transport were discussed, reports produced, and decisions taken. ASECAP (the European Association of Tolled Motorways, Bridges and Tunnels Infrastructures Operators); International Transport Forum (ITF); Arena (TRA); International Road Federation (IRF), and the European Construction Industry Federa
  • BRIC countries' economic growth
    March 22, 2012
    European Union and OECD countries will be confronted with a considerable slow down of economic growth and transport activities after a year of feeble economic growth. This is the forecast in the IRU [International Road Transport Union] Road Transport Indices, which allows the comparison of GDP growth, road freight transport volumes and new vehicle registrations in 58 countries. IRU head of sustainable development, Jens Hügel highlighted that “when comparing the 2010 and 2011 figures, BRIC [Brazil, Russia, I
  • Organisations' 'fairer charging' call
    March 2, 2012
    Three major road organisations have issued a policy statement on fair charging for greener, smarter and safer road infrastructure.
  • Improving truck parking security and quality
    February 8, 2012
    The innovative LABEL project lays the foundations for reducing cargo theft and promoting greater transport security on Europe's road networks. In Europe, cargo theft is a criminal phenomenon that has an important economic impact. Research has put the total loss caused at approximately €8.2 billion yearly. The calculation includes costs such as the re-production and the re-packaging and resending of the stolen goods. According to data from the International Road Transport Union (IRU), one out of six drivers