Tag: Europe

Royal Mail, TNT, Deutsche Post, Posten, Finnish Post back EU postal reforms

The chief executives of Deutsche Post AG, Sweden’s Posten AB, Finnish post office Suomen Posti Oyj, TNT NV and the UK’s Royal Mail have said that they believe postal market liberalisation is already working in their countries and that they are ‘ready for full market opening in 2009’.

The chief executives of the five groups, which distribute some 60 pct of postal mail volume in Europe, will attend a dinner in Brussels tonight where EU internal markets commissioner Charlie McCreevy is expected to speak about the commission’s plan to liberalise postal markets.

Klaus Zumwinkel, chief executive of the Deutsche Post, said ‘Liberalisation that allows healthy competition is the only way forward. We are ready to embrace it’.

The European Commission will announce the next step in its liberalisation of Europe’s postal services tomorrow, with deliveries of letters under 50 grams open to competition by 2009, said EU spokesman Oliver Drewes earlier today.

The commission will debate the proposals before announcing plans to free up the market for letters in Europe, following on from its 2002 directive on parcels and letters over 50 grams.

Currently, historical operators may still hold national monopolies on letters weighing less than 50 grams in Europe.

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UPS Romanian arm eyes 20per cent rise in H2 turnover

Trans Courier Service (TCS), the Romanian agent of U.S. delivery company United Parcel Service (UPS), said on Tuesday it expects its turnover to rise by 20 per cent in the second half of the year, compared to the first six months, because of higher number of orders in November and December.
“This rise is based on the bigger volume of orders that we expect in the second half, having in mind that November and December are peak months in UPS operations,” UPS country manager for Romania, Vasile Cretu, said in a statement.
The authorised UPS service contractor for Romania, Trans Courier Service (TCS) did not provide turnover figures.
TCS reported a 30 per cent year-on-year rise in its first-half net profit. Its turnover rose by 25 per cent on the year in the first half, the company said.

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EU to take next step in postal reform, national monopolies must cease by 2009

The European Commission will announce the next step in its liberalisation of Europe’s postal services tomorrow, with deliveries of letters under 50 grams open to competition by 2009, said Oliver Drewes, spokesman for EU internal markets commissioner Charlie McCreevy.

The commission will debate the proposals at its weekly meeting tomorrow before announcing plans to free up the market for letters in Europe, following on from its 2002 directive on parcels and letters over 50 grams.

Currently, historical operators may still hold national monopolies on letters weighing less than 50 grams in Europe.

According to a report in Belgian daily La Libre Belgique, which says it has seen the proposals, the UK, the Netherlands, Scandinavian countries and Germany have been the most successful in terms of ending the monopoly of traditional postal services providers and introducing competition.

The Belgian and French post offices are widely expected to be announced as the worst offenders in liberalising markets.

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Halfway point in construction of DHL hub

The halfway point at one of Europe’s biggest construction sites: Construction work on DHL’s European hub begun at the start of 2006 is progressing well and is right on schedule. Klaus Zumwinkel, the Chairman of the Board of Management at Deutsche Post World Net, briefed German Chancellor Angela Merkel, German Transportation Minister Wolfgang Tiefensee and Saxony Premier Georg Milbradt on the project’s progress during an on-site visit on Tuesday and celebrated “halftime” with representatives from politics, business, arts, culture and media as well as employees.

“The Leipzig/Halle hub will be a vital element within our company. Along with Hong Kong in Asia und Wilmington in the United States, it will be one of the three most important transfer locations in DHL’s global network,” Zumwinkel said. DHL plans to create 3,500 jobs by 2012. Experience has shown that other companies and service providers will then create an additional 7,000 jobs in the region as the result of such a project. Zumwinkel said: “By opening this important location to our Group and investing around EUR300 million, we are taking an important step to bolster the country’s new states and Germany as a business location.”

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Deutsche Post chief backs end to monopolies

The head of Europe’s largest postal group on Tuesday welcomed an ambitious drive to throw open the region’s Euro90bn (USD113bn, GBP61bn) market for postal services to full competition by 2009, but warned that a majority of governments was opposed to the plan.

Klaus Zumwinkel, the chief executive of Deutsche Post, was speaking as the European Commission put the finishing touches on a landmark proposal for postal reform that will be presented in Brussels on Wednesday. The plan is expected to face criticism from France and other countries, which want to water down the draft law and ensure that incumbent mail operators are compensated for the loss of their monopoly. The Commission’s draft law calls for an end to the last postal monopolies by 2009, paving the way for unfettered competition in the large and lucrative market for delivering mail weighing less than 50 grammes.

However, the proposal also gives governments significant scope to oblige postal groups to continue servicing remote and thinly populated areas where it is hard to turn a profit.

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