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Winter transport chaos grows in Europe

Two million without power in southeast France: operator
Marseille, France (AFP) Dec 21, 2009 - The French electricity grid was forced to cut off power to around two million people in the southeast of the country Monday for an hour in order to avoid a massive regional blackout. France had to import power earlier than normal this winter and had warned that cold weather could force cuts because of near record consumption and delays to maintenance in its network of nuclear power stations. Some districts of Marseille, including the city centre, and of the suburbs of Nice, were without power during the stoppage, and firefighters made several calls to rescue passengers stuck in lifts. The blackout lasted from 1:46 pm to 2:45 pm (1246-1345 GMT). "(Grid operator) RTE has put in place a programme of controlled load-shedding in order to avoid a complete black-out in the region," an RTE spokesman said, referring to the Provence Alpes Cote d'Azur region. The area includes the major Mediterranean port of Marseille, the cities of Nice, Avignon and Toulon, the resorts of the French Riviera and major Alpine ski stations. It is home to 4.7 million people and is vulnerable to power shortages as only one 400,000 volt high tension line supplies all the major cities. The spokesman said that the problem was caused by increased power use due to freezing temperatures and a "technical incident" at a power sub-station in Tavel, near Avignon, in the southern Rhone valley.

Stranded Eurostar passengers vent fury
London (AFP) Dec 21, 2009 - Even though Eurostar said no trains would run for a third day on Monday, travellers like one furious Parisian stuck in London went to St Pancras railway station, hoping for a miracle. "It's shameful, they gave us 36,000 incorrect pieces of information to get us to leave the station," said Catherine, who came to Britain to spend a few days with her daughter. "Each time you speak to someone from Eurostar, they tell you something different." She was one of some 75,000 travellers left stranded during one of the busiest weeks of the year, as many people head off to see family and friends for the Christmas holidays. The trouble started when five trains broke down on Friday night in freezing temperatures, trapping 2,000 people overnight in tunnels.
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Dec 21, 2009
The French government expressed outrage Monday over the breakdown of Eurostar cross-Channel trains that has stranded tens of thousands of people as deadly winter transport chaos spread across Europe.

A car that veered off an icy road caused the derailment of a Paris commuter train, injuring 36 people and adding to the agony of a system badly hit by a 12-day old strike. Another commuter train in the Croatian capital hit a buffer Monday injuring 50 people.

Six people were killed in accidents in Germany and three in Austria. More flights were cancelled in France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain and many main highways were blocked across Europe where some regions had more than two feet (50 centimetres) of snow.

The breakdown of the Eurostar rail service under the Channel, linking London to Paris and Brussels, has symbolised Europe's suffering.

After the nightmare of more than 2,000 people stuck in the tunnel when five trains broke down, tens of thousands more people have missed trains that have been cancelled since Friday night.

With no services planned until at least Tuesday, France's Transport Minister Dominique Bussereau ordered an investigation into the breakdown, which Eurostar said has been caused by trains unable to handle the change from freezing temperatures outside to warm temperatures in the tunnel.

Bussereau, on a trip to Beijing, said: "There have already been incidents in the Eurotunnel... but to have traffic blocked for several days in a row, that is not acceptable," Bussereau said.

France's Durable Development Minister Jean-Louis Borloo summoned the head of the French SNCF state rail company, Guillaume Pepy, to demand an explanation into the "unbelievable" treatment of Eurostar passengers.

Eurostar said it had launched its own review by independent experts into the breakdown of the high speed trains.

The winter storms caused other accidents across Europe.

A Paris commuter train derailed late Sunday injuring at least 36 people, according to authorities.

A car swerved on ice and hit a bridge wall sending concrete onto the rails of the RER C commuter line at Choisy-le-Roi southeast of Paris, police said. Firemen had to evacuate 300 people on the train. The driver of the car has been arrested.

No trains ran on the line Monday. The RER A line running across the Paris region has been out of action for 12 days because of a strike.

Authorities were also investigating whether the heavy snow caused a crash at Zagreb's main railway station where the commuter train failed to stop and smashed into a concrete buffer. One person among the 50 injured suffered life-threatening injuries, Croatian police said.

Air traffic was again badly hit across Europe.

Seven hundred people spent the night on camp beds at Amsterdam-Schipol airport. Authorities said more flights were likely to be cancelled after dozens were grounded Sunday.

The Dutch rail network was also badly hit Monday with the railway company advising commuters to stay at home.

Heavy snowfall led to more delays and cancellations at Frankfurt and Duesseldorf airports. More than 200 flights in Frankfurt were cancelled Sunday and Duesseldorf airport was closed most of the day, leading to some 300 flights being cancelled or redirected.

At least six people died throughout Germany over the weekend due to exposure to Arctic temperatures or in car accidents on icy motorways.

Temperatures are forecast to rise this week after hitting a frigid -33.6 degrees Celsius (-28.5 degrees Fahrenheit) Saturday in Bavaria.

Twenty percent of flights out of Paris-Charles de Gaulle were expected to be cancelled because of the remains of snow on the runway and freezing temperatures, the DGAC civil aviation authority said. Many others were delayed. Forty percent of flights were cancelled on Sunday.

Only two of the four runways at Madrid-Barajas airport operated Monday because of heavy snow and an airport spokesman said more than 50 arrivals or departures had been cancelled.

Eight high speed trains going from Madrid to Barcelona, Malaga and Seville had also been cancelled.

Two flights into Brussels airport were cancelled and about 20 other arrivals delayed. One flight to Skopje was cancelled and dozens delayed.

burs/tw/co

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Sarkozy orders Eurostar to end Paris-London rail chaos
Paris (AFP) Dec 21, 2009
French President Nicolas Sarkozy has ordered Eurostar to get its trains back on track by Tuesday after a shutdown blamed partly on "fluffy" snow caused misery for tens of thousands of travellers. Eurostar said services between London and Paris could partially resume on Tuesday morning if test runs on trains "go well", but that schedules would not get back to normal before Christmas on Friday ... read more







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