Crossrail Benelux

Crossrail Benelux
Industry Rail freight
Founded 2000 (as Dillen & LeJeune Cargo)
Founder Ronny Dillen et Jeroen Le Jeune
Headquarters Deurne, Belgium
Area served
Port of Antwerp, Belgium
Key people
Jeroen LeJeune
Owner Jeroen LeJeune, Hupac, MSC, LKW Walter, Bertschi AG, GTS
Number of employees
31 (2005)[1] 160 (2009) (whole Crossrail group)
Parent Crossrail AG (Hupac)
Website

Crossrail Benelux is a Belgian rail freight company, a subsidiary of Crossrail AG; operating in Belgium.

Crossrail's Class 66 near Bruges, Belgium

History

The company was formed in 2000 as Dillen & LeJeune Cargo (DLC) and was the first private company to haul a freight train in Belgium. On that moment, both founders owned 50% of the shares. In October 2001, Hupac entered the capital of DLC before the first train was effectively hauled

In April 2002, the first container train was hauled for MSC from port of Antwerp to Aachen West station by a Class 66 locomotive (leased from Porterbrook), and further to Schwandorf station with another Hupac-hired electric locomotive, breaking the monopoly of state owned SNCB (although Belgian freight rail transport was officially opened to private operators only in March 2003, DLC operates based on European directives from 1991 and a security license for the Belgian rail network).

A security license to access the Dutch network was obtained at the beginning of 2003, with the first train hauled to Waalhaven on January 11. Trains to and from the Zeelandic Flanders (a part of Netherlands which is not directly connected to the remainder of the Dutch rail network) became recurring traffic, with the Terneuzen based Bretschi container terminal as client.

In October 2007, DLC merged with Swiss Babcock & Brown owned Crossrail AG.[2] Hupac had left the capital of DLC, so the shareholding structure was dispatched between both DLC founders (having 25.5% each) and Babcock & Brown for the remainder. The merged company operates as Crossrail AG, with subsidiaries in Belgium and Italy. In September 2008, the company acquired a security license to train its own drivers.

Problems between both founders resulted in August 2008 in Jeroen Lejeune leaving the company for a few months.[3] As Babcock & Brown was facing strong difficulties after the global credit crunch, Jeroen Le Jeune came back and bought their 49% shares in August 2009, together with the shares from Ronny Dillen.[4]

In September 2009, Crossrail successfully sued Belgian rail network manager Infrabel for having given full priority to passenger traffic instead of treating all rail operators equally during a strike.[5]

As traffic grew, Le Jeune quickly faced liquidity problems and searched partners to refund the company:[6] The first candidate was no newcomer. Hupac took a 25% participation on August 24, 2010.[7] As of February 2012, two customers of the company — Austria based LKW Walter and Général Transport Service (GTS) from Italy — acquired respectively 25% and 10% of the shares, with LeJeune group reducing to 40%.[8] Two other customers — Bertschi AG and MSC — each took 10% of shares from LeJeune in July 2012.[9]

See also

References and notes

Notes

    References

    External links

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