Sernam takes the train to bypass French motorway speed limits

Sernam has switched the bulk of its long-distance traffic from road to rail in order to avoid being hit by tighter motorway speed limits for light trucks from next January. It has also bought a small regional trucking company.

With effect from January 1, 2007, the maximum speed limit in France for goods vehicles weighing 3.5 tonnes or more will be reduced from 110 km/h to 90 km/h. This speed limit currently applies to vehicles of 12 tonnes or more. The 18% reduction in speed, along with obligatory rest times for drivers, means, for example, that the Paris-Niort truck journey will in future take 5 hours, 45 minutes on average, compared to 4 hours, 20 minutes at present, Sernam pointed out.

In response to this operational restriction, Sernam said that it has re-designed its nationwide transportation network in order to ensure it can maintain the present transit times for its customers. The company provides next-day afternoon deliveries across virtually of all France.

With effect from mid-October, Sernam is now carrying the bulk of its long-distance volumes on the night-time Train Blocs Express (TBE), freight TGV operating at speeds of up to 200 km/h on key North-South routes. The operator’s network is based on nine hubs, including new multimodal platforms at Toulouse and Bordeaux. A new Paris hub will open at Valenton at end-2007.

Meanwhile, Sernam also announced that it has acquired a small trucking company, Coulonge, based at Limoges in south-west France, which had revenues of €4.5 million in 2005.

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