Skip to main content

Strategic paper on HGV road user charging

Another stage has been reached in the informal negotiations between the European Parliament, the European Commission and the Council to revise the Eurovignette Directive. The Directive involves charging heavy goods vehicles for the use of certain infrastructures, and an informal compromise has to be endorsed by the European Parliament and Council.
May 10, 2012 Read time: 2 mins

Another stage has been reached in the informal negotiations between the European Parliament, the 2465 European Commission and the Council to revise the Eurovignette Directive.

The Directive involves charging heavy goods vehicles for the use of certain infrastructures, and an informal compromise has to be endorsed by the European Parliament and Council.

However, the 1203 International Road Transport Union (IRU) claims that if it is given the go-ahead, “the non-mandatory earmarking of the revenues from the Eurovignette, aimed at greening road transport at-source, as decided by the European Parliament’s TREN Committee, will turn the Directive into a pure additional tax on the already heavily taxed road transport services.”

Meanwhile, 1103 ASECAP, the European Association of operators of tolled road infrastructures, has presented its Road Manifesto for an Efficient, Safe, Smart and Sustainable Transport, which underlines “the efficient use of toll revenues collected by the motorway concessionaires to provide a high-quality road transport service at an affordable cost.”

At its 39th ASECAP Study and Information Days in Brussels, Belgium, where about 250 road transport experts gathered, the strategic paper was presented in the European Parliament and submitted to Saïd El Khadraoui, Member of the European Parliament and rapporteur on the revision of the Eurovignette Directive, and to Carlo Des Dorides, executive director of the European GNSS Agency.

“It is a strong signal from the tolled motorway operators to the European institutions, fully in line with the ambitions of the European Commission’s White Paper (Roadmap to a Single European Transport Area – Towards a competitive and Resource Efficient Transport System),” says ASECAP.

“The European tolled motorway operators demonstrate their full support for long-term infrastructure financing planning based on the user-payer and
polluter-payer principles. They reassert their strong commitment to reinvest tolling revenues in the motorway network.”

Klaus Schierhackl, chief financial officer at 4178 Asfinag, the Austrian motorway and expressway network operator, has been appointed as the new president of ASECAP, and will take the lead of the association for two years.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Implementing road user charging
    February 14, 2012
    Oregon Department of Transportation's James Whitty spoke with Jason Barnes on the state's progress with VMT fee-based charging
  • The DURABROADS project targets safer mobility
    April 2, 2014
    The innovative DURABROADS project will help deliver a sustained reduction of fatalities in the long term, writes the ERF’s José Diez In 2012, Europe recorded the lowest number of fatalities since the first data were collected. All in all, fatalities were down by 9% in 2012, which means that 3,000 lives were saved that year. Should the current pace continue, we can be confident that the ambitious objective of reducing fatalities by 50% by 2020, compared to 2010, will be reached. To achieve the goals of
  • IRF Manifesto on Climate Change Adaptation released at COP22
    January 30, 2017
    Released in Morocco during COP22 negotiations, the document has generated enthusiasm in the sector and gained the support of partner organisations beside the endorsement from IRF Geneva membership around the world Under the leadership of the Moroccan Government, adaptation and action on adaptation has gained centre stage at COP22 hosted in Marrakech from 8 to 18 November 2016. As climate change and the threats its poses become increasingly apparent, it is also becoming clear that the transport sector is
  • Future funding crisis looms?
    August 13, 2012
    From the UK’s Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) comes data revealing a future funding crisis many governments will face. The IFS study, commissioned by the RAC Foundation, shows that income from motoring taxation will fall as traffic volumes increase. The problem is that increasing fuel efficiency of new generation vehicles, plus the introduction of electric cars, will deliver smaller and smaller returns on fuel taxation. Although fuel is taxed heavily in the UK, and right across Europe, projections show t