AT: Decline in SGV

Rail Freight Transport: Decline in Freight Volume and Transport Performance. Rail freight transport indicators showed a downward trend in 2019: Both freight volume—totaling 116.8 million net metric tons (2018: 117.9 million)—and transport performance—at 23.2 and 46.3 billion net and gross metric ton-kilometers, respectively (2018: 23.7 and 46.6 billion, respectively), have each declined. Figure 3: Development of the rail freight market, 2015–2019. Source: Survey by Schienen-Control.

The market share of competing rail carriers in terms of net metric tons continued to rise to 36.4 percent. Although Rail Cargo Austria continued to hold by far the largest market share across all freight transport indicators in 2019, its competitors were able to gain further ground that year:Their market share rose both in terms of volume (net metric tons)—from 33.3 percent in 2018 to 36.4 percent in 2019—and in terms of transport performance (net metric ton-kilometers)—from 30.7 percent to 31.8 percent year-over-year.

Of the 42 rail companies licensed for freight transport, Rail Cargo Austria had the highest market share in net ton-kilometers, at 68.2 percent. Behind it were five other companies, each with a market share of over three percent; the remaining companies had shares below that level.As in the previous year, the strongest competitors were the German company Lokomotion and the Austrian company LTE, each with around 4.7 percent, followed by TXLogistik with around four percent. Cargo Service (CargoServ) and Wiener Lokalbahnen Cargo stood at around 3.7 and 3.3 percent, respectively.When viewed by route category within the ÖBB network, competitors’ market shares (measured in gross ton-kilometers) increased across the board in 2019, although they had declined on the supplementary network and remained virtually stable on the rest of the core network in 2018. It is worth noting, first, that market shares on the Brenner and Western axes were already remarkably high prior to this, but increased significantly once again in 2019 and now stand at over 45 percent and just below that, respectively. However, as was already the case from 2017 to 2018, traffic volume on the Brenner corridor declined again in 2019 in absolute terms. Interestingly, the Brenner corridor is the route segment on which, compared to the other segments mentioned, the fewest competitors operate in terms of number. The Western Corridor is the route segment on which, alongside the other international corridors (e.g., the Tauern and Semmering routes), the most companies operated transport services. On the Western Corridor, the number of competitors increased significantly once again—by three percentage points—due to the entry of new market participants and the resulting intensified competition, even as total absolute traffic volume rose relatively sharply. In absolute terms, however, traffic volume in the supplementary network and on other international routes declined slightly in 2019, while it grew slightly in the rest of the core network. In summary, it can be stated that competition in freight transport remains strongest on the Brenner corridor, followed by the Western Corridor.

https://www.schienencontrol.gv.at/files/1-Homepage-Schienen-Control/1g-Presse/Pressemappen/Pressemappen%202020/PA%20Lang%20mit%20Grafiken%20SC-Jahresbericht%202019_final.pdf

TransFER Wolfurt–Rotterdam to Include a Stop in Switzerland

Rail freight transport from Rotterdam (APMT II, ECT Delta, Wuppermann) to Wolfurt [AT]; 3 times a week since January 2018, with operational responsibility extending to Kufstein [DE] on behalf of Rail Cargo Operator – Austria GmbH; since October 16, 2018, also including a branch line to Moerdijk (Wuppermann)

Since May 8, on Fridays from Rotterdam

Railway Service Provider, LLC (EDG)

With a new route for our direct connection between Wolfurt and Rotterdam, we are now also connecting Frenkendorf in Switzerland to our intermodal network, thereby expanding our multimodal logistics services.

Wolfurt is not only of great importance to Vorarlberg’s strongly export-oriented economy. Austria’s westernmost terminal is a hub for the entire Lake Constance region—and, even more so, for all of Europe. The Wolfurt freight center, the starting point for high-frequency TransFER connections, provides direct transport links to the northern ports of Hamburg and Bremerhaven, as well as to the Dutch port of Rotterdam, one of Europe’s most important transportation hubs.

Effective immediately, we are now offering an additional stop in Frenkendorf, Switzerland, as part of our TransFER Wolfurt–Rotterdam service. Two round trips will operate as usual from Wolfurt via Kufstein to Rotterdam and back. We will also operate an additional round trip from Rotterdam via Frenkendorf to Wolfurt. Loading and unloading facilities are available in Frenkendorf. This allows us to transport cargo from Frenkendorf to Wolfurt, where we connect to our extensive freight transport network. This creates connections to the Adriatic ports of Koper and Trieste, as well as a direct link to intercontinental cargo flows to the bimodal Bilk Terminal, Hungary’s largest terminal in Budapest. The goal is to expand the TransFER Wolfurt–Rotterdam service to four routes with two stops in Frenkendorf.

LTE Brings Sugar to Switzerland

The LTE Group has begun transporting sugar from Poland to Switzerland on behalf of VTG Rail Logistics. From Basel onward, these services are operated under a license from Eisenbahndienstleister GmbH (EDG), whose new managing director, Markus Bertram, previously headed LTE Netherlands. In Poland, a third party provides the traction.

The cars are provided by VTG. They are part of a series of Uagnpps-type sugar cars that were primarily procured for the Südzucker Group’s operations. At the time, the railcar leasing company had procured four train sets at its own risk, which were initially used for Südzucker operations for two years.

185,596 / Rümikon
https://www.flickr.com/photos/152440859@N03/49900539222/
Re 446 016 + 018 / Pfungen
https://www.flickr.com/photos/152440859@N03/49915220546/

ÖBB, LTE, ELL: Joint Workshop

ÖBB-Technische Services GmbH (ÖBB TS), LTE Logistics & Transport Europe (LTE), and ELL European Locomotive Leasing (ELL) are forming a joint venture with ETL Lokservice GmbH to establish and operate a service center for locomotives.

The new hub in Gramatneusiedl, southeast of Vienna, is located at the intersection of international rail freight corridors.

Starting in the fall of 2021, modern locomotives will be maintained there in a facility with an area of approximately 1,000 m² and four work bays. The three partners bring different areas of expertise to the table: LTE and ELL contribute their modern locomotive fleets, while ÖBB TS brings its many years of expertise as an established and professional rail vehicle maintenance provider.

Among the major locomotive leasing companies, ELL’s competitors already have their own repair shops: Akiem acquired mgw Service, which operates a repair shop in Krefeld; Railpool took over the northrail repair shop in Hamburg; and MRCE and Siemens opened the Locomotive Workshop Rotterdam (LWR) in 2019.

LTE Back for Glencore

The LTE Group has been making regular runs for the trader Glencore again since January 2020. Twice a month, grain is transported from the Czech Republic to Rotterdam Europoort (EBS), and in the opposite direction, soybeans are transported to the port of Lovosice, where they are loaded onto ships operated by ADM.

LTE 186 943 with VTG grain cars, Angeren
Photo source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/remarkable1432/49717301596/

LTE with V60 in Amsterdam

After a long hiatus, LTE Netherlands is once again putting a BT Trains shunting diesel locomotive into service. Unit 363 712 is handling shunting operations during loading at Amsterdam’s Africahaven and transporting the groups of cars to …

Amsterdam Houtrakpolder, March 22, 2020
https://www.flickr.com/photos/janstanner/49688072122/in/contacts/

LTE Acquires Sappi-Kohle

The coal train from Rotterdam’s Maasvlakte to the Sappi paper mill in Gratwein, Austria, has a new operator. Instead of DB Cargo, the LTE Group has been operating the weekly services since February 22, 2020. Since then, 35 brand-new, gray Eamnos locomotives from GATX have been in use instead of the brown Eanos locomotives. In Austria, two Bombardier TRAXX locomotives are used to haul the trains due to load requirements (up to 2,600 metric tons).

Shortly before reaching its destination, the train is split in Peggau-Deutschfeisteritz and delivered by Rail Cargo Austria (RCA) on two consecutive days from Gratwein. The electric locomotives spend the night at Graz Ostbahnhof and are either brought in for the Peggau–Gratwein transfers or, starting from Gratwein, handle the empty car transfers to form block trains at Graz Köflacherbahnhof.

Horst-Sevenum (NL) February 22, 2020 | LTE 186 942
Source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/arnold50/49571122342/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cargofrank/49570368627/in/dateposted-public/
Source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/cargofrank/49570368627/

https://www.drehscheibe-online.de/foren/read.php?004,9222580

20 Years of LTE

https://www.lte-group.eu/de/News-Blog/The-Roaring-Twenties.htm

At the turn of the year, LTE could look back with satisfaction on the past two decades of consistent corporate prosperity. The LTE Group team is now looking forward to an exciting decade: their own “Roaring 20s.”

The Roaring Twenties

Since its founding nearly 20 years ago, the company has focused on establishing a strong presence through its route network, which has since become an integral part of much of Europe. “Last year, we successfully laid the groundwork for a ninth subsidiary in Bulgaria, and our sister company, Adria Transport in Slovenia, is expanding its business into Croatia,” says Andreas Mandl, CEO of the LTE Group, with a sense of pride.


LTE will soon be operating in nine European countries (AT, HU, SK, CZ, NL, DE, RO, PL, BG) through its own subsidiaries and its sister companies in Slovenia and Croatia. In recent years, the group’s revenue has grown to 135 million euros, its fleet to approximately 80 locomotives, and currently 460 specialists from a wide variety of fields are already working for the LTE Group. “The subsidiaries are operating extremely successfully in their respective markets,” emphasizes Michael Benda, CFO of the LTE Group. “Our colleagues in Germany operate with an extremely lean structure and are highly efficient, and our newest subsidiaries in Romania and Poland have, within a very short time, transformed one-man operations into two successful companies with a total of 100 employees.

Essentially, the LTE-group puts the European ideal into practice every day, as it develops tailor-made success strategies with its customers, which are then implemented individually together with and within the nine subsidiaries. In other words: “Decentralized organization in the countries, but one face to the customer.” In addition, rail transport makes an important contribution to climate protection: in Austria, for example, there is now only green (CO₂-free) traction power, meaning it comes 100% from renewable energy.

RTB CARGO: More Automotive

Passenger car transport (Mercedes-Benz) Kecskemét – Zeebrugge [BE]; 2–3 times per week since February 2020; traction from Hegyeshalom (taken over from LTE Hungária Vasúti Árufuvarozó és Logisztikai Kft.) [HU] on behalf of Hödlmayr Logistics GmbH

Passenger car transport (Mercedes-Benz) Kecskemét – Bremerhaven; 2–3 times per week since April 2020 Traction from Hegyeshalom (taken over from LTE Hungária Vasúti Árufuvarozó és Logisztikai Kft.) [HU] on behalf of Hödlmayr Logistics GmbH