Of mere passing interest, no doubt.
A quick glance at wikipedia, here and here, reveals the following...
Eurostar International Limited (EIL) is the parent company of the Eurostar service operating between London, Paris and Brussels. Eurostar was previously operated by three separate companies in Belgium, France and the United Kingdom, but this structure was replaced by EIL as a new single management company on 1 September 2010. EIL is owned by London and Continental Railways (40%), SNCB (5%) and SNCF (55%).#
London and Continental Railways (LCR) is a company that was involved in the construction of High Speed 1 (HS1) in the United Kingdom. Originally established in 1994 as a private consortium to build HS1 under a contract agreed with the UK Government, it subsequently ran into financial difficulties and has been owned by the Department for Transport since 2009
So Eurostar, 40% owned by HMG is allowed to bid for franchises, but DOR (100% owned by HMG) isn’t.
Of course DfT is perfectly happy for overseas state owned railways to run as many of Britain's trains as they want, whether passenger or freight.
Eurostar's ICEC bid partner, Keolis, is 56.7% owned by French railway SNCF.
None the less, Eye wonders at what percentage point does UK state involvement in running a competitively tendered franchise suddenly become unpalatable?
Answer from the Treasury and DfT came there none...
UPDATE: Eye issues unreserved apology to Keolis!
According to a press release on the Keolis website from April 2012...
"SNCF increases its shareholding in Keolis to accelerate the next phase of the company’s development
"At the closing of this transaction, SNCF will hold a 70% stake of Keolis alongside a long term investment partner."
Eye wishes to apologise for misleading readers into thinking that the Keolis/Eurostar bid for ICEC might, in anyway, have been considered to be 'private sector'.
Tuesday 1 October 2013
That Eurostar 'private sector' bid for ICEC in full
DfT makes commitment to legacy technology?
Good news for historians of t'interweb!
According to the Department for Transport...
The rail industry is to roll out high speed mobile broadband on the busiest parts of Britain’s rail network, Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin announced yesterday.
Under the plans, 70% of the travelling public will benefit from the new
technology by 2019, with passengers expected to begin noticing
improvements to their journey during 2015.
Hmm... 2019 is six years away.
So perhaps the equivalent of saying in 2007 that all trains will be fitted with cable or DSL access...
UPDATE: This from Steve Strong...
"Under the plans, 70% of the travelling public will benefit from the new
technology by 2019"
Or 2021, obviously, if it is being delivered by Arriva Cross Country.
Haket signals departure to Keolis
This from Ruud Haket, currently MD of Greater Anglia...
I’d like to tell you that I have accepted the offer of a new role as Chief Operating Officer of Keolis’ UK business, so I’ll be leaving Greater Anglia in the near future. We’re still working out my leaving date and the Abellio team will now start the recruitment of a new Managing Director, so I’ll let you have more details about both of those things as soon as I have them.
Interesting...