ESPON transnational conference "Southern Europe at the crossroads"
Venue
Rome, Italy
Italian Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport
"Parlamentino" Room (IV floor)
00161 Rome
Italy
Email: vassilen.iotzov@espon.eu
Over the last decade, South European regions have seen considerable investments in transport. The efforts to increase and improve the accessibility to markets and public services for citizens and businesses in Bulgaria, Cyprus, Croatia, Italy, Greece, Malta, Portugal, Romania and Spain have benefitted from European funding and lending. Within the period 2007-2013, transport spending in the Southern convergence regions of Greece, Spain, Italy and Portugal alone amounted to 18.7 billion EUR or 23% of the overall budget earmarked for transport by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the Cohesion Fund (CF) for that period. This figure represents nearly a third of the total ERDF and CF resources that were made available to these regions. Under the broader theme of “Network Infrastructures in Transport and Energy”, 21,5 billion EUR of ERDF and CF funding have been secured for the 9 Southern Member States in the period 2014-2020. In addition, loans worth over 50 billion EUR in total have been made available by the European Investment Bank to leverage the transport and infrastructure investments in the Southern EU regions between 2007 and 2017, reaching 38% of the total lending capacity of the EIB for transport investments across Europe within that period.
These investments have certainly made an impact on the accessibility dynamics in Southern Europe. Monitoring these dynamics over time seems essential to help guide future decision-making.
Yet, measuring accessibility might be a challenging endeavour. For more than a decade, the European Territorial Observatory Network ESPON has been accompanying transport investment policies by designing accessibility models. ESPON has become the main source for comparative accessibility indicators for European regions, supporting a number of strategic decision-making processes on European, national, regional and local level.
The aim of this transnational conference was to provide cross-modal snapshots, drawing attention to challenge zones for both passengers and freight transport in Southern Europe. It examined different modes of transport: road, rail, air and seaborne. The conference, furthermore, addressed accessibility scenarios for 2030 (road, rail and air) as well as for 2050 (seaborne) and provided insights into the future of instruments for strategic infrastructure investments, particularly the Connecting Europe Facility.
The conference took place on 3 October 2017 at the Italian Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport in Rome.