UNUnited Nations Economic Commission for Europe

Press Releases 1999

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Geneva, 23 April 1999

ECE/TRANS/99/3

COUNTRIES IN SOUTH EASTERN EUROPE TO LIBERALIZE INTERNATIONAL ROAD TRANSPORT

At a Conference in Athens to be held on 28 April 1999, Ministers of Transport of Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia*, Greece, Hungary, Republic of Moldova, Romania, Slovenia, The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and Turkey are expected to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to facilitate and liberalize international road transport of goods in South Eastern Europe.

The Conference will be hosted by the Government of Greece in the framework of the Southeast European Cooperative Initiative (SECI) which was launched in December 1996 as a support mechanism for the Dayton Peace Agreement. The main objective of SECI is to encourage cooperation among its participating States and to facilitate their integration into European structures. This initiative is being supported by Austria, Italy, the Russian Federation, Switzerland and the United States of America.

The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) has been prepared by the SECI Project Group on Border Crossing Facilitation, chaired by Mr. Y. Maniatis, Secretary-General at the Greek Ministry of Transport and Communications with substantive assistance by the Transport Division of the UN/ECE secretariat.

The MoU addresses the most urgent problems and deficiencies of international road transport and trade in South Eastern Europe, which are not only due to a lack of adequate infrastructure, but also due to complex border crossing procedures and other institutional, regulatory and economic barriers.

The MoU foresees therefore that the following measures are taken by the SECI participating States:

Progressive liberalization towards a quota free regime for bilateral and transit road transport. In particular and as a short term measure, quota should be abolished by the end of 2000 for all lorries complying with specific environmental and safety standards ("green" and "greener and safer" lorries) established by the European Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT);

Accession by all SECI participating States to 16 important multilateral conventions and agreements established by the UN/ECE providing for harmonized legal and administrative rules for international road transport in Europe;

Harmonization of national requirements for maximum permissible weights and dimensions of lorries with those applicable in the European Community (EC) and introduction of an international lorry weight certificate to avoid repetitive weighing at border crossings;

Harmonization of charging policies for international road transport, including tolls and road user charges, in line with commonly acceptable European principles;

Establishment of a data bank, also accessible to the transport industry, providing accurate and up-to-date information on all charges related to the use of the national road network by foreign operators;

Introduction of procedures to facilitate the granting of visa for professional drivers engaged in international road transport.

The SECI participating States also stress in the MoU that tangible solutions to the common regional problems identified in the MoU require a new and innovative approach in a regional co-operative framework. Therefore, the MoU stipulates that its provisions should be included, by the end of 2002, into existing or yet to be concluded bilateral road transport agreements. In this way the commitments made in the MoU will become national law and will become enforceable in the SECI participating States. At the end of this process of close regional cooperation in this field, it is foreseen that a multilateral framework agreement on road transport will be concluded covering all SECI participating States.

In order not to loose momentum of this initiative and to ensure adequate monitoring of the provisions of the MoU, it is also foreseen in the MoU to establish a Regional Road Transport Committee composed of representatives of all SECI participating States. The first meeting of this new Committee is planned to be held in 1999 in Greece. The Transport Division of the UN/ECE secretariat will provide initially technical support and secretariat services to the Committee.

The SECI Project Group on Border Crossing Facilitation is hosted by Greece and aims at simplifying border crossing procedures in the region, focussing on the transport of goods. Further to the preparation of the MoU, this Project Group has already prepared earlier a 70 US$ million loan proposal to the World Bank to improve infrastructures at border crossings in the region that has led the Bank adopting a new regional approach to lending. So-called APRO Committees@ have also been established in the participating States bringing together Government authorities and the private sector to facilitate export and import procedures.

SECI also works in the fields of transport infrastructure development, energy efficiency as well as natural gas and electricity interconnections. Each of the projects undertaken in the framework of SECI is hosted by one of the participating States. Technical assistance to SECI is provided by the secretariat of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UN/ECE) based in Geneva.

More detailed information on SECI and on the Project Group on Border Crossing Facilitation, including the draft text of the MoU may be obtained from the UN/ECE Web site on SECI (www.unece.org/seci).

Additional information may also be obtained directly from:

Mr. Martin Magold
Chief, Border Crossing Facilitation Section
UN/ECE Transport Division

or

Mr. Will Keenan
Regional Adviser
UN/ECE Trade Division
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UN/ECE)
Palais des Nations
CH - 1211 Geneva 10

Tel: (+41 22) 917 24 53 (Mr. Magold)
Tel: (+41 22) 917 27 93 (Mr. Keenan)
Fax: (+41 22) 917 00 39
E-mail: [email protected]
[email protected]