Eurostar, the high-speed passenger train service that
links the UK and mainland Europe, has reported record traveller numbers
and ticket sales for 2008 following the first full year of operations on
High Speed 1.
Passenger numbers broke the nine million barrier
for the first time with 9.1 million travellers carried – an
increase of 10.3% from 8.26 million in the previous year.
Ticket sales also reached a record level of £664
million, rising by 10.9% from £599 million in 2007. Shorter
journey times to Paris and Brussels and the excellent connections
offered by St Pancras International are attracting increasing
numbers of passengers to switch to high-speed rail.
The results would have been significantly
stronger but for the closure of part of the Channel Tunnel
following a fire on board a Eurotunnel freight shuttle on 11
September 2008, which continues to cause reductions in services
and longer journey times.
The nature of the Eurostar service, in which
travellers book up to four months in advance, means sales were
significantly affected by the Channel Tunnel incident from
September onwards, whereas the subsequent economic downturn had
little impact on the year as a whole.
Eurostar continues to achieve high levels of
punctuality with 92.4% of trains arriving on time or early during
2008.
Richard Brown, Chief Executive, Eurostar, said,
“An increase of nearly a million extra passengers using High Speed
1 during its first year of operations, even with the impact of the
tunnel fire, demonstrates beyond doubt that people prefer
high-speed rail to short-haul air. They are switching because rail
journeys are faster, more punctual, more convenient, and have less
environmental impact.
“Whilst reduced tunnel access will affect the
first quarter of 2009, we expect to return to a full timetable in
the early spring with journey times restored to 1h 51 to Brussels
and 2h 15 to Paris once Eurotunnel completes repairs to the
Channel Tunnel.
“The uncertainties of the current economic
climate reinforce the importance of good value fares and
Eurostar’s UK lead-in fare remains at £59 return for the sixth
year in a row.
“The short-term outlook for 2009 is challenging,
but the long-term prospects for Eurostar and high-speed rail are
very good. High Speed 1 is fully connected into Europe’s fast
expanding high-speed network and we expect to see continuing
growth in the number of travellers making longer connecting
journeys from towns and cities across the UK to Belgium and
France, as well as to destinations in the Netherlands and
Germany.”
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