SHARE
COPY LINK

POLITICS

TAV: Italy-France rail line ‘would lose seven billion euros’, report says

The planned high-speed rail link between Italy and France will not be profitable, a controversial Italian government-commissioned report said today.

TAV: Italy-France rail line 'would lose seven billion euros', report says
A No TAV protester. Photo: paolomariani69/Flickr

Italy's government is divided over the proposed TAV (Treno Alta Velocità) line between Turin and Lyon.

The plan is supported by Interior Minister Matteo Salvini's League but rejected by its coalition partner. the Five Star Movement (M5S).

The report, made public today, was aimed at helping the government settle the matter.

It said the trans-Alpine train line and tunnel would be “very negatively profitable”, losing seven billion euros by 2059.

While the line could make 1.3 billion euros from passenger rail traffic, that does little to offset future construction and management costs of 7.9 billion euros, plus 463 million euros in lost revenue from motorway tolls and lost fuel taxes, the report said.

The tunnel through the Alps, which has already been partially dug, would reduce travel time between Milan and Paris from almost seven hours to just over four.

Drilling the tunnel beneath the Alps began more than a decade ago. Photo: Jean-Pierre Clatot/AFP

Proponents of the line, launched nearly 20 years ago and officially scheduled to be finished in 2025, argue that it would rid the roads of a million trucks and avert some three million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions each year.

But the link has been criticised as a misuse of public funds. and during election campaigning the Five Star Movement (M5S) had pledged to block it if they came to power.

Although the League has long been in favour of the venture, Salvini had previously said the project “must go ahead“, later saying he would wait to see the cost-benefit analysis before adopting a position.

The M5S fears the so-called TAV may join the growing list of promises it has broken since coming to power, with analysts warning of the potential fall-out particularly for populist leader and deputy prime minister Luigi Di Maio.

READ ALSO: Protests as Salvini visits construction site for controversial high-speed trainline

The line and its 57.5 kilometre tunnel have become yet another bone of contention between Rome and Paris, which last week recalled its ambassador in an escalating war of words between the two governments.

Italy's Transport and Infrastructure Minister Danilo Toninelli described the report's figures as “merciless” but also as the beginning of a dialogue with Paris.

Italy's centre-left opposition Democratic Party noted that five of the six experts who drew up the report had previously slammed the project. The sixth expert refused to sign off on the report.

A committee in charge of the railway line, based in France, said the analysis was “remarkably partisan” as it described the project's environmental benefits such as less road travel and pollution as economic losses through less petrol tax and motorway toll revenue.

The European Union, which has already pumped hundreds of millions of euros into the project, said recently that it could ask for its money to be repaid if work is halted.

READ ALSO: 

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

POLITICS

Italy’s Meloni criticises her own government’s ‘Big Brother tax’ law

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on Wednesday criticised an "invasive" tax evasion measure reintroduced by her own government, sparking accusations of incompetence from opposition lawmakers.

Italy's Meloni criticises her own government's 'Big Brother tax' law

The measure, allowing Italy’s tax authorities to check bank accounts to look for discrepancies between someone’s declared income and their spending, was abolished in 2018 but its return was announced in the government’s official journal of business this week.

Meloni had previously been strongly critical of the ‘redditometro’ measure, and took to social media on Wednesday to defend herself from accusations of hypocrisy.

“Never will any ‘Big Brother tax’ be introduced by this government,” she wrote on Facebook.

Meloni said she had asked deputy economy minister Maurizio Leo – a member of her own far-right Brothers of Italy party, who introduced the measure – to bring it to the next cabinet meeting.

“And if changes are necessary, I will be the first to ask,” she wrote.

Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani, who heads the right-wing Forza Italia party, also railed against what he called an “obsolete tool”.

He called for it to be revoked, saying it did not fight tax evasion but “oppresses, invades people’s lives”.

Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, who leads the far-right League party, said it was “one of the horrors of the past” and deserved to stay there.

Opposition parties revelled in the turmoil within the governing coalition, where tensions are already high ahead of European Parliament elections in which all three parties are competing with each other.

“They are not bad, they are just incapable,” said former premier Matteo Renzi, now leader of a small centrist party.

Another former premier, Five Star Movement leader Giuseppe Conte, asked of Meloni: “Was she asleep?”

The measure allows tax authorities to take into account when assessing someone’s real income elements including jewellery, life insurance, horse ownership, gas and electricity bills, pets and hairdressing expenses.

According to the government, tax evasion and fraud cost the Italian state around 95 to 100 billion euros each year.

SHOW COMMENTS