Nederlandse Spoorwegen

Nederlandse Spoorwegen
State-owned company
Industry Rail transport
Founded 1938
Headquarters Utrecht, Netherlands
Key people
Roger van Boxtel (CEO)[1]
Products Rail transport, rail construction, services
Revenue Increase 4.9 billion (2015)
Decrease €118 million (2015)
Number of employees
34,000 (2015)
Parent State of the Netherlands
Subsidiaries Abellio
Abellio Greater Anglia
Serco-Abellio 50%
Merseyrail 50%
Northern Rail 50%
Abellio ScotRail
Nedkoleje
Qbuzz (100%)
NSRegio (99%)
Slogan Free To Move
Website www.ns.nl
Nederlandse Spoorwegen

Railway tracks in the Netherlands (2013)

Locale Netherlands
Dates of operation 1938present
Predecessor Hollandsche IJzeren Spoorweg-Maatschappij (HSM)
Maatschappij tot Exploitatie van Staatsspoorwegen (SS),
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Headquarters Utrecht
Website www.ns.nl

Nederlandse Spoorwegen (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈneːdərlɑntsə ˈspoːrʋeːɣə(n)]) (English: Dutch Railways) or NS is the principal passenger railway operator in the Netherlands. NS provides rail services on the Dutch main rail network (hoofdrailnet). The rail infrastructure is maintained by network manager ProRail, which was split off from NS in 2003. Freight services, formerly operated by NS Cargo, merged with the DB Schenker group in 2000.

NS runs 4,800 scheduled domestic trains a day, serving 1.1 million passengers.[2] In addition, NS provides international rail services from the Netherlands to other European destinations and carries out concessions on a number of foreign rail markets through its subsidiary Abellio.

History

Old and new headquarters of NS.

Founding

The NS was founded in 1938 when the two largest Dutch railway companies, the Hollandsche IJzeren Spoorweg-Maatschappij (HSM) and the Maatschappij tot Exploitatie van Staatsspoorwegen (SS), formally merged. These two companies, however, had been intensively cooperating as early as 1917. There were both economic and ideological reasons for the cooperation.

As a result of the First World War, the Netherlands' economy had declined causing HSM and SS to fall from profitability. Given their national importance, allowing them to slip into bankruptcy was not considered acceptable. While remaining independent companies, HSM and SS improved overall efficiency by cooperatively integrating their operations. The Dutch government further supported HSM and SS by purchasing shares in both firms. In 1938, the government merged the two companies to form the Nederlandse Spoorwegen (NS). In the process, the government bought all remaining shares, yet never nationalised the company. Therefore, NS remained, and still is, a private company solely owned by the Dutch government.

NS as a state enterprise

During the Second World War the NS remained an independent company, but was forced to do the Germans' bidding; the NS was forced to construct the railway lines to camp Westerbork and help in the deportation of almost a hundred thousand Jews to extermination camps. The NS went on a strike once during the war, in the winter of 1944-45, after it had declined to participate in one a year earlier.

The NS played a pivotal role in the reconstruction of the country. There was little alternative transport in the country besides the train, while there was a huge demand for logistical services which the NS could provide.

While the 1950s were generally a good time for the company, it started to decline in the 1960s, like most other railways around the world. Not only did the NS suffer from the competition of the car and other modes of transport, it also suffered from a loss of income when natural gas started to replace coal as the main fuel in powerplants and homes after a gas field was found near Slochteren. The NS had been involved in the transport of coal from the mines in Limburg to the remainder of the country.

The NS responded with an aggressive strategy named Spoorslag '70. This strategy meant, among other things, that the NS substantially increased the number of trains per hour and also introduced the Intercity services. However, it was quite clear that this would never return the company to profitability. Nevertheless, the company was declared to be of national importance, meaning that it would receive large amounts of subsidies every year.

Reforms of the 1990s

In the early 1990s, the government started to question the subsidies given to the NS. Not only were there questions regarding the way the NS spent the subsidies, but, after the neo liberal reforms of the 1980s, it was also considered not done to award generic subsidies to companies. The government decided on the verzelfstandiging of the NS. (Although technically, this is not the case, but instead refers here to withdrawal of the subsidies.) The idea was that not only rail transport was economically viable, but that there could be competition as well.

There were two external circumstances which allowed for this to happen. Firstly, the European Union passed Directive 91/440, which prescribed, among other things, the (formal) separation of the national railways into two separate companies, one which deals with the infrastructure, and the other which deals with the transport activities. Secondly, the old CEO of the NS, Leo Ploeger, retired, which allowed the government to name a new CEO which would execute the government's plans. The new CEO was Rob den Besten.

The plans entailed that the government would remain responsible for the rail infrastructure, while the NS would provide the (passenger) transport on a commercial basis. Where the services would prove to be economically inviable the government would subsidise that route. The division which was responsible for the infrastructure would later be turned into NS Railinfratrust.

To facilitate the government plans for the commercial operation of the NS, den Besten planned to split the NS into many smaller independent divisions. The idea was that these smaller divisions would be better able to respond to the market. The plans, however, received massive opposition from the unions, which meant that the only divisions created were NS Reizigers, and locomotive maintenance company NedTrain. There were also other internal changes in the company. The routemanagers got de facto control over the operation, but they were dependent of a different organ in the company.

The freight sector NS Cargo became part of the Deutsche Bahn after its merger with Railion in 2000, now known as DB-Schenker rail.[3]

These reforms were never much of a success and left the company in an uncontrollable state. Result was that the company started to decline rapidly, and that the employees started many unorganised strikes. Following this, the complete board of directors felt it necessary to resign in late 2001.

In 2002 Karel Noordzij was named as new CEO of the NS with the mission to restore the confidence in the company. In essence, he did this by reversing most the reforms of the late 90s and restoring the company to the old state. Meanwhile, the government had changed its opinion of the railways, it no longer considered competition on (passenger) transport a viable goal. Thus, the government started to commission railway operators to run routes on the network. The NS was granted (by the national government) the concession to run on the main lines, whereas other companies received a number of the concessions on the secondary lines. The goal is to give individual concessions for the individual lines, but (at least) until 2025 the NS holds the concessions for main lines.

Symmetry minute

The timetable change on 10 December 2006 saw the most routes to approximate the Symmetry time in clock-face schedules to the one used in most other European countries. Previously, this was different at minute :46 and led to problems by cross-border trains.

Controversies

NS has been involved in various controversies.

Coverage

The old NS Sprinter, also known as "Apekop" or Materieel '64

The NS covers most of the country, with almost all cities connected, mostly with a service frequency of two trains an hour or more (and at least four trains per hour between all of the largest 5 cities: Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague, Utrecht and Eindhoven as well as some smaller cities Nijmegen, Amersfoort, Arnhem, 's-Hertogenbosch, Dordrecht and Leiden). From December 2008 train frequencies were increased on following services: Arnhem-Nijmegen (8 trains per hour) and Den Haag - Rotterdam (12 trains per hour), Amsterdam Centraal-Hoofddorp (16 trains per hour). A night train service was added between Utrecht, Gouda and Rotterdam.[10] "Train routes in the Netherlands" shows all the routes of the NS and private companies. Trains usually run between 5:00 am and 1:00 am, although there is also a night line which connects major cities in the Randstad throughout the night, and in weekends also some major cities in Brabant.

In addition to its domestic services, NS is also a partner (along with Stena Line and their British railway company Abellio Greater Anglia) in the Dutchflyer service. NS has also entered into a partnership with KLM to operate services on the new HSL-Zuid under the name NS International.

Hoofdrailnet

The hoofdrailnet is the official core internal passenger railnetwork of the Netherlands. Currently NS has a concession until 1 January 2015 to provide all passenger services on this network, except that on some stretches there is an overlap with lines for which other operators have a concession. Some of the most notable of these stretches are those from Elst railway station to Arnhem railway station, where NS shares tracks with Arriva, and further on to Arnhem Velperpoort. Here the tracks are shared by three operators, as Breng, ultimately part of Transdev, operates there in addition to the two previously mentioned operators. Officially the overlaps do not constitute competition on the same lines.

The concession was free of charge until 2009, and costs an increasing amount since then, up to €30 million for the year 2014.

The concession distinguishes main stations and other stations. Except on New Year's Eve, the main stations have to be served twice an hour per direction from 6:00-24:00, and the other stations once an hour. Exceptions are possible until the start of the next concession[11]

The next concession period is 2015-2025. Therefore, before 2015 it has to be decided whether NS will keep the concession, and under what terms. Requirements will include:

Currently trains on the hoofdrailnet without a toilet include:

Types of train service

There are two kinds of passenger trains:

There are also two former train categories, which are now used only by private operatores:

Fares and tickets

A NS Dagretour (one-time chip card), from Rijssen to Almelo and back.

The OV-chipkaart is the most common form of fare payment, but paper tickets are still available. However, the OV-chipkaart is becoming increasingly popular in the face of repeated NFC failures and unagreed charges.

On buses and trams, hourly tickets are for sale for those who have too little credit to travel but enough cash. For train travel, one can also buy a one-use chip card.[12]

Traditional paper tickets were finally abandoned in July 2014 for both NS and regional rail operators. Single or return tickets, used by incidental travellers and tourists, are still available at ticket machines and service counters, but are now loaded on a disposable OV-chipkaart so tickets must be validized by "checking in" at a ticket barrier or card reader before the train is boarded.

There is partly a common tariff system with four smaller passenger train operating companies: Syntus and Connexxion in the centre and the east, Veolia on the 'Maaslijn' and 'Heuvellandlijn' in the south east, Arriva in the north and most of the east of the country and on the 'Merwede-Lingelijn' (from Dordrecht to Geldermalsen).

All of the ticket machines do not accept banknotes, but since August or September 2014, all machines at all train stations accept MasterCard and VISA debit cards using a Personal Identification Number. A €0.50 supplement is required for using a credit card, a€1 supplement for buying a disposable, one-use, chipcard.[13]

It is also possible to buy e-tickets online on the Dutch Railways website, but payment is accepted only by transfer from Dutch bank accounts (iDEAL).[14] E-tickets can also be purchased on the NMBS/SNCB B-Europe website, which accepts payment by MasterCard and Visa credit cards.

During the annual Boekenweek (Bookweek), it is possible to travel for free on Sunday upon showing the Boekenweekgeschenk (Bookweekgift).

Increasingly, operators apply separate tariffs, partly related to the gradually introduced OV-chipkaart, which combines card integration with price differentiation. However, several new passes introduced by NS in 2011 are now also valid in trains of the other operators Arriva, Connexxion, Syntus, and Veolia.

Even so, the developments require travellers to be aware of the various companies and often increase the fare for journeys requiring a change from one to another.

Travelling with the OV-chipkaart, one has to register starting a journey (check in) and ending it (check out), and onr always have to travel away from the point of one's latest check-in. Thus, in the case of a voluntary detour, one has to check out and check in to register starting a new journey.

Fixed point fares subscription

Fixed point fares known as “Traject Vrij”[15][16] is a monthly or yearly train pass subscription(In Dutch abonnementen). It is provided by the Netherlands railway system (NS Nederlandse Spoorwegen) to significantly reduce regular travel costs. It can also carry across other train operating companies within the Netherlands, such as Veolia Limburg.[17]

Traject Vrij (Fixed point fares) allow a customer to stipulate their daily travel between two points. Point A and point B (For example, Amsterdam to Rotterdam). A monthly fee/subscription covers travel costs between the points. A person can travel during all hours at a significantly reduced price, 30 percent or more cheaper than an average ticket. The price depends on how many zones of travel are used kilometres. Pricing also depends on first class or second class. The NS has a pricing Matrix that calculates a fixed price for a travel cost subscription.

A subscription only covers travel with in the borders or route between point A anf B. If travel occurs beyond or outside these areas, the person is billed via the OV-ChipKaart applicably.

Traject Vrij is commonly used by workers or younger students (12 to 17) who travel or use the same locations or routes every day. A user is required to link the OV-ChipKaart to a created NS account[18] and from there, a user can take out a subscription which can be linked to the existing OV-ChipKaart.

There are in addition other[19] fixed price subscriptions provided by the NS, which cover peak hours, day passes, unlimited country travel, intercity and more.

Off-peak discount passes

NS defines off-peak hours as weekdays 00:00-06:30, 09:00-16:00 and 18:30-24:00 and on Saturdays and Sundays the whole day. With a discount product on the pass one is automatically granted the discount based on the type of the discount product and the time of checking in. The term discount includes 100 percent discount, i.e. free travel.

There is an Off-Peak Discount Pass (in Dutch: Dal Voordeel) for €29 per year, allowing a 40 percent discount on journeys starting in off-peak hours. In the case of a group of up to four people, all get the discount even if only one has a pass. This card replaced the old off peak discount pass (in Dutch: Voordeelurenabonnement, which can still be renewed but is otherwise no longer available). These are the advantages of Dal Voordeel compared to the Voordeelurenabonnement:

These are the disadvantages:

Travellers aged 60 years and older can buy a supplement for €14 for free travel during off-peak hours on 7 days of choice (with some limitations) during the year. It is not possible to buy multiple supplements for the same year.

There is also an Off-Peak Free Pass (in Dutch: Dal Vrij) for €1188 per year, allowing free journeys, which start in the off-peak hours (compare the OV-Jaarabonnement).[20]

For €318 per month, travelers can buy an unlimited travel pass which is always valid, even during the peak hours. Even with the card, checking in and out is always required, or the traveller risks a fine. Regulations involving time periods (for NS, may be different for other operators):

Logo

The Nederlandse Spoorwegen corporate logo was designed in 1968 by Gert Dumbar and Gert-Jan Leuvelink both of the graphic design company Tel Design. Introduced in that same year, it replaced an earlier design which had been used since 1946. The logo, pervasive within trains and railway stations in the Netherlands, plays a significant part in the NS' signage, promotions, advertising and graphic design.

The logo usually appears in blue or black on a dark yellow or white background. Since its introduction, NS livery has also had this same distinct dark yellow or white colour. The logo is a widened letter 'N' and a sideways (reversed) 'S'-shape. The two arrows in the logo represent the train's movement, and the two lines in the middle represent the track.

Northern Rail logo with Serco-Abellio logo including the Nederlandse Spoorwegen logo at Darlington on a Class 142.

Divisions of NS

In dealing with the general public, these distinctions are not made and the terms Nederlandse Spoorwegen and NS are used.

NS has contracts with Connexxion and BBA, now Veolia Transport for the provision of bus services to replace train services in the case of planned and unplanned cancellations.

On July 23, 2010 NS sold its daughter company Strukton to the construction company Oranjewoud N.V.. This concluded a long history of planning, designing and executing track development done by the NS.[23][24]

Policy

There is a delay refund scheme entitling passengers to a partial or full refund of the ticket price if a journey is delayed by half an hour or more. The scheme does not apply on short-distance journeys (tickets less than €2.30) and cases in which the delay is the result of planned cancellations that were announced some days in advance. Refunds are, in general, half the ticket price of a one-way trip after a delay of over 30 minutes, the full ticket price after a delay of one hour or more. That applies to nearly all kinds of tickets. The refund is not considered a monetary compensation for lost time but rather as a reduction in charges where a poor service has been provided. Many do not claim because the system is perceived as cumbersome; however, the system has improved for holders of some rail passes. Part of the cost of the scheme is paid by ProRail, since they are responsible for part of the delays.

Since 1 January 2004, tobacco smoking is prohibited on domestic trains, station halls and covered parts of platforms. The smoking of cannabis was already prohibited. Smoking is allowed near smoking-zones (Rookzones), posts with an ash-tray built in, scattered around stations.

Since June 2003, the sale of coffee, soft drinks, beer, sandwiches, candy, etc., has ceased aboard domestic trains. The increasing number of Servex convenience stores at railway stations and the relatively short duration of most train journeys in the Netherlands have lowered the demand for on-train services. In 2005, a much reduced in-train service of drinks and small snacks has been reintroduced on longer journeys. Now, the RailTender service primarily operates in the intercity trains on the trajectory between Utrecht and Zwolle.

Technological assistance for train staff

Conductors have a small computer called Railpocket with timetable, fares information, and capabilities to read the OV-chipkaart. The latest version is the HP iPaq h4350 Pocket PC, which can communicate through Bluetooth with their Sony Ericsson T610 GPRS-telephone. NS is currently studying the upgrade to a next generation platform.

Statistics

See also

References

  1. Van Boxtel CEO
  2. "Annual report 2010". Nederlandse Spoorwegen. 2011-01-01. Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  3. "DB And NS Sign Freight Merger Deal.(Brief Article)(Statistical Data Included)". elibrary.ibtimes.com. International Railway Journal. 1 October 1999.
  4. "NS-topman Bert Meerstadt stapt op". Retrieved 2015-06-05.
  5. "NS stopt met fiscale truc: treinen niet langer gekocht door Ierse dochter". Retrieved 2015-06-05.
  6. "NS doet nog steeds zaken via de Ierse route". NRC Q. Retrieved 2015-06-05.
  7. "Limburg gunt concessie openbaar vervoer aan Arriva". Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  8. "Nog meer problemen voor ex-NS-topman Timo Huges". Retrieved 2015-06-19.
  9. "‘NS-topman Timo Huges stapt op wegens mogelijk machtsmisbruik’". Retrieved 2015-06-05.
  10. www.treinreiziger.nl
  11. http://www.ns.nl/over-ns/nieuwscentrum/persberichten/2011/11/ns-blijft-vervoerder-op-nederlands-hoofdrailnet.html
  12. "Welke kaart past bij u". Trans Link Systems B.V. Retrieved 2014-08-07.
  13. "Betalen met creditcard mogelijk bij grootste deel kaartautomaten". Treinreiziger.nl. 2014-08-13. Retrieved 2014-08-19.
  14. "The e-ticket". Nederlandse Spoorwegen. Retrieved 2013-02-19.
  15. nl:Trajectabonnement, Retrieved 2015-08-28
  16. "Traject Vrij Jaar". NS International. Retrieved 2015-08-28.</
  17. "Overzicht reisproducten Veolia". Veolia Transport Nederland. Retrieved 2015-08-28.
  18. "Welkom bij Mijn NS". NS International. Retrieved 2015-08-28.
  19. "abonnementen". NS International. Retrieved 2015-08-28.
  20. For more passes, see .
  21. "Abellio Group Head Office" Group corporate website, Abellio, Utrecht, Netherlands, Undate. Retrieved 19 June 2015.
  22. "National Express Group PLC agreement to sell Travel London". National Express Group. 2009-05-21. Retrieved 2009-05-21.
  23. "NS agrees to sell Strukton". Railway Gazette International. 2010-07-29. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  24. Oranjewoud N.V., the holding company that owns Strukton.

Further reading

Johnston, Howard (18–31 May 1989). "A brief guide to the NS". RAIL. No. 96 (EMAP National Publications). NS 150 special supplement. ISSN 0953-4563. OCLC 49953699. 

External links

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