this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2025
166 points (97.7% liked)

Europe

2482 readers
1242 users here now

News and information from Europe 🇪🇺

(Current banner: La Mancha, Spain. Feel free to post submissions for banner images.)

Rules (2024-08-30)

  1. This is an English-language community. Comments should be in English. Posts can link to non-English news sources when providing a full-text translation in the post description. Automated translations are fine, as long as they don't overly distort the content.
  2. No links to misinformation or commercial advertising. When you post outdated/historic articles, add the year of publication to the post title. Infographics must include a source and a year of creation; if possible, also provide a link to the source.
  3. Be kind to each other, and argue in good faith. Don't post direct insults nor disrespectful and condescending comments. Don't troll nor incite hatred. Don't look for novel argumentation strategies at Wikipedia's List of fallacies.
  4. No bigotry, sexism, racism, antisemitism, dehumanization of minorities, or glorification of National Socialism.
  5. Be the signal, not the noise: Strive to post insightful comments. Add "/s" when you're being sarcastic (and don't use it to break rule no. 3).
  6. If you link to paywalled information, please provide also a link to a freely available archived version. Alternatively, try to find a different source.
  7. Light-hearted content, memes, and posts about your European everyday belong in !yurop@lemm.ee. (They're cool, you should subscribe there too!)
  8. Don't evade bans. If we notice ban evasion, that will result in a permanent ban for all the accounts we can associate with you.
  9. No posts linking to speculative reporting about ongoing events with unclear backgrounds. Please wait at least 12 hours. (E.g., do not post breathless reporting on an ongoing terror attack.)

(This list may get expanded when necessary.)

We will use some leeway to decide whether to remove a comment.

If need be, there are also bans: 3 days for lighter offenses, 14 days for bigger offenses, and permanent bans for people who don't show any willingness to participate productively. If we think the ban reason is obvious, we may not specifically write to you.

If you want to protest a removal or ban, feel free to write privately to the mods: @federalreverse@feddit.org, @poVoq@slrpnk.net, or @anzo@programming.dev.

founded 8 months ago
MODERATORS
 

Tap for article

German trains are less punctual than Britain’s ‘broken’ railways

Olaf Scholz mocked UK trains. FT analysis of 1.9bn data points show they are more reliable than Germany’s network

Germany’s rail problems have become so bad that Deutsche Bahn’s intercity service is less punctual than even the worst operator in Britain, a country the German chancellor mocked for its “broken tracks and bad trains”.

Olaf Scholz last week dismissed the idea of privatising Germany’s rail system in a debate for Germany’s snap elections, arguing that it would “end as badly as in England, where nothing works any more”. 

But Financial Times analysis of railway data shows Germany’s state-owned rail group Deutsche Bahn consistently delivering one of the least reliable services in central Europe — and even when compared with the UK network, which is routinely criticised for poor performance at home and abroad. 

About 72 per cent of Deutsche Bahn’s intercity trains arrived within 10 minutes of their scheduled arrival time in the year to January 2025, compared with 78 per cent of British long distance trains, according to the FT analysis.

Any interaction with the German rail network is also one of the biggest factors affecting the punctuality of long-distance rail travel in central Europe. 

Services from Germany to Amsterdam, for instance, are delayed by an average of almost 13 minutes, while trains coming to the city from elsewhere are typically within two minutes of their scheduled arrival time. 

The poor state of German trains has become a symbol for the country’s vast investment backlog and a top theme in the federal elections on February 23. Politicians have debated how to fix crumbling roads, neglected railways, housing shortages and depleted armed forces. 

Germany and the UK use different definitions for punctuality. To allow for a direct comparison, the FT used detailed German rail network statistics collected by the websites Bahn-Vorhersage and Zugfinder. 

The analysis is based on more than 1.9bn train arrivals at stations that were tracked by the websites from February 2024 until the end of January 2025, amounting to over 5mn per day. 

The data paints a picture of Deutsche Bahn, which runs about 95 per cent of all long-distance trains in Germany, struggling to meet even basic service targets.

While just 37 per cent of German long-distance trains arrived with a delay of less than 60 seconds, even Britain’s worst performing train operator — Avanti West Coast — met this service level in 41 per cent of all cases. The UK average is 69 per cent. 

About a fifth of intercity trains in Germany were delayed by more than 15 minutes, almost twice the share at Avanti West Coast and 10 times as much as in the UK overall. 

The performances of the rail networks in both the UK and Germany lag far behind some of their European peers. In Austria, Switzerland and the Netherlands, punctuality consistently exceeds 90 per cent. 

Germany’s neighbours also suffer from Deutsche Bahn’s patchy performance, as its delayed trains have knock-on effects for timetables across central Europe.

In Basel’s central station, trains originating in Germany arrive with an average delay of more than 12 minutes — 12 times higher than those coming from elsewhere.

The Swiss network, renowned for its punctuality, has resorted to stopping some late-arriving German services at the border to prevent them disrupting local operations.

Deutsche Bahn told the FT that infrastructure was “the key to more punctual railways”, adding that 80 per cent of all delays were caused by the poor state of its network. The company described its infrastructure as “too crowded, too old, and too prone to disruptions”. 

As a positive example, Deutsche Bahn pointed to the new high-speed track between Berlin and Munich, where 82.5 per cent of all trains in 2024 arrived within 10 minutes of their schedule. 

For decades, Germany skimped on maintenance and infrastructure upgrades as successive governments put a higher priority on fixing roads and balancing budgets. 

According to data by Pro-Rail Alliance, a German railways lobby group, the German government in 2023 spent just €115 per citizen on railway infrastructure, compared with three times that amount in Austria and four times in Switzerland. 

Andreas Geissler, a transport policy expert at Pro-Rail Alliance, told the FT that investment surged to €190-€210 per citizen in 2024. Over the past 15 years on average the investment stood at just €73 per citizen.

Since 1995, when the government started to prepare for a privatisation that was later shelved, 12 per cent of the track network has been axed while passenger traffic is up by 50 per cent and cargo traffic has risen by 90 per cent. 

Poorly designed funding laws made matters worse. Deutsche Bahn was long required to fund maintenance work with its annual budgets, while renewal and extension was paid for by the federal government. 

“This created incentives not to properly maintain kit, but to run it down and then replace it at the governments’ expense,” said one person familiar with the matter, adding that this issue was only recently addressed. 

More than half of all the interlockings — a type of signalling apparatus — need to be improved, with some that date back a century to the reign of Kaiser Wilhelm II. 

In Frankfurt, one of Germany’s main railway hubs, a critical bridge across the river Main close to the European Central Bank has been labelled beyond repair. Built in 1913 and quickly repaired after it was damaged in the final days of second world war, it has now been declared unsafe for pedestrians. It will take years to build a replacement. 

Deutsche Bahn has labelled 16 per cent of all German railways infrastructure as “poor”, “deficient” or worse. The investment backlog that needs to be dealt with grew by €2bn in 2023 to €92bn, according to Deutsche Bahn estimates.  

Even a 74 per cent surge in federal investment in the railways infrastructure in 2024 to €16.9bn was unlikely to turn the tide, according to an insider who added that this push was only expected to stop further decay. 

Friedrich Merz, the centre-right leader likely to be Germany’s next chancellor, has said he wants to split the operation of the network from the operation of the trains — a move reminiscent to UK rail privatisation in the 1990s.

But Merz has not committed to provide the billions that Deutsche Bahn says it needs by 2027. A person with deep knowledge of the investment backlog in the German railways network told the FT reforming the structure “would not improve the punctuality of a single train”.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] cyrano@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

This is just to illustrate my point on the cost difference between uk and de for the cost of the ticket. Value are arbitrary and not correct. But cost is definitely significantly higher in uk.

[–] GreatAlbatross@feddit.uk 4 points 3 days ago (1 children)

€58/m for all non-ice is hard to beat.

[–] cyrano@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 3 days ago

Yeah and that will have good to have a cost drilling including ice in the article.