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EUROSTAR

Britain to put its stake in Eurostar up for sale

The British government announced on Wednesday that it is to sell its lucrative 40 percent stake in cross-channel rail service Eurostar. With Eurostar's revenues on the up the sell-off is expected to bring in hundreds of millions of pounds for government coffers.

Britain to put its stake in Eurostar up for sale
The British government is to sell its 40 percent stake in Eurostar, it was announced on Wednesday. Photo: Mike Knell

The British government  announced on Wednesday it is to sell its 40 percent stake in Eurostar, the high-speed rail service connecting London with Paris and Brussels, as part of a privatisation drive.

Treasury Chief Secretary Danny Alexander was to unveil the country's new national infrastructure plan (NIP), which sets out how it will privatise £20 billion ($32 billion, €24.1 billion ) of financial and corporate assets over the next six years.

The government expects £375 billion of public and private investments by 2030, according to the report.

Major insurers boosted the plans by announcing they are seeking to invest £25 billion in infrastructure projects over the next five years.

"This is great news for the people of the UK because after years of neglect, the UK's energy, road, rail, flood defence, communications and water infrastructure needs renewal," Alexander was to say, according to extracts of his speech

"It will boost the UK economy creating jobs and making it easier to do business. It will also make the UK a better place to live for everyone who calls it their home."

Eurostar recently announced a 10 percent rise in revenues and five percent spike in passenger numbers compared with the same period last year.

The government expects to reap hundreds of millions of pounds from selling its stake in the cross-channel rail operator.

Eurostar is currently owned by France, Britain and Belgium with French rail operator SNCF owning a 55 percent stake and Belgium's national rail company NMBS/SNCB owning a 5 percent stake.

Marc Fressoz, a French author who specialises in transport, said it was a "good time" to sell.

"Eurostar has reached maturity on the market. It has seen off air travel on the Paris-London and Brussels-London routes," he told AFP.

He predicted that SNCF or SNCB could be tempted to increase their share.

But if a pension fund or another private investor comes in, Eurostar could face demands to increase its short-term profitability in a way that state investors do not, Fressoz said.

Eurostar is in rude health, having recorded operating profits of 91 million pounds last year – boosted by the London Olympics – compared with 20.8 million in 2011, and it saw passenger numbers rise two percent to 9.9 million in the same period.

The stronger performance continued in the first quarter of this year with a 10-percent rise in revenues on the back of passenger numbers which climbed five percent.

But competition beckons. Germany's Deutsche Bahn got the green light in June to run trains through the Channel Tunnel and is expected to start offering services linking London to Frankfurt, Cologne, Amsterdam and Rotterdam in 2016.

Eurostar services started in November 1994, six months after British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and French president Francois Mitterrand inaugurated the Channel Tunnel.

In June this year the EU told Britain and France to act to bring down charges for trains running via the under-sea Channel tunnel, saying both passengers and freight operators were paying too much.

Eurostar then suggested it would be willing to lower its ticket prices if Eurotunnel agrees to lower their charges, the train operator’s chief confirmed in an interview. 

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EUROSTAR

Eurostar’s souvenir bomb warning after Paris station evacuated

Passengers on Eurostar have been warned about bringing shells that have been turned into souvenirs onto the trains after Paris' Gare du Nord station had to be evacuated.

Eurostar's souvenir bomb warning after Paris station evacuated
The Eurostar terminal at Gare du Nord was evacuated
The Paris transport hub had to be evacuated early on Monday morning after a World War II shell was found in a passenger's bag.
 

 

The evacuation, which happened at about 5.45am on Monday, was completed by 10am, but has led to longer than usual queues for Eurostar services.

It is the latest in a series of security alerts caused by passengers trying to take souvenir war artillery on to trains.

Eurostar issued a special warning ahead of the First World War commemorations in November 2018, but with just a month to go until memorial events for the D Day landings, there are fears that the problems could recur.
 
“As you're travelling during the commemoration period, please remember that you can't bring any real or replica bombs, shells (complete or partial) or weapons on board – even if you bought them from a gift shop,” Eurostar told passengers last year.
   
“If you bring them with you, they'll be confiscated at security and may result in the need to evacuate the station.”
   
Old World War I shells turned into flower pots have been popular souvenirs in Belgium and France ever since the end of the conflict, but passengers attempting to take them on board trains for Britain have sparked bomb scares in recent years.
 
Some of the alerts, which happen every few months, have also been caused by war memorabilia collectors bringing back disarmed ordnance unearthed by farmers at battle sites in northeast France.
   
Eurostar said even disarmed shells can set off X-ray alarms.
   
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