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FIF-VDB joint declaration The plea for a level playing field
According to their joint declaration of 12 July 2010 the VDB and FIF, alive to the importance of guaranteeing a level playing field for international competition in the railway industry sector, incited the application of the principle of reciprocity in the railway rolling-stock transport field concerning the opening-up of public markets.
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“The way the industrial sector is managed is primarily the business of its leaders» - (Ville Rail & Transports – 14/12/2011 – p. 54)
Interview with Louis Nègre, Vice-Chairman of the Strategic Committee for the Railway Industrial Sector and Chairman of the French Railway Industries Association (FIF)
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Beware Basle III ! (Ville Rail & Transports – 14/12/2011 – p. 14)
According to Jean-Pierre Audoux, Delegate-General of the French Railway Industries Association (FIF), the new BASLE III international banking standards could well precipitate a damaging credit crunch. This is extremely bad news indeed for Snit-sponsored railway projects and for an industry whose prospects are dimming once again.
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How to escape from dependence on “mother-hen” SNCF: - (Le Rail – Octobre 2011 – p. 28 à p. 31)
June 2011 saw the publication of a very detailed report entitled « Rouvrir la voie : une industrie d’avenir pour la France, un atout pour l’Europe[i] » (Re-opening the line to secure a future for the French railway industrial sector, an asset for Europe). This is a sector responsible for building trains, tramways and metros, but one marked by extreme concentration over the past thirty years, with Alstom (France) and Bombardier (Canada) absorbing a number of well-established French MSEs (medium-size enterprises) in the sector.
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Investment fund for the railway sector (L'usine Nouvelle - 15- 21 September 2011, p. 10)
Empty election pledge or genuine resolve to support the French railway industrial sector ?
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SNCF, RFF: reform or face decline (Les Echos -20/07/2011 p. 20)
Gone are the days when TGV and TER success more than compensated for rail freight losses. These three sectors, in different ways, face fresh challenges which call for a new approach.