The European Railway Award

The European Railway Award was initiated in 2007[1] and is jointly organised by the Community of European Railway and Infrastructure Companies (CER),[2] and the Union des Industries Ferroviaires Européennes, the Association of the European Rail Industry (UNIFE).[3]

Award ceremony and annual reception

The European Railway Award honours outstanding political and technical achievements in the development of economically and environmentally sustainable rail transport. The award is held annually in Brussels with over 500 participants. The award includes prize money, which is donated to the charitable organizations of the laureates’ choice. The jury consists of CEOs of rail companies and other stakeholders from the transport sector.[4] The Award Ceremony is followed by the joint CER-UNIFE Annual Reception.[5]

From 2007-2016, two awards (one political, one technical) were given out. In 2017, for the tenth anniversary of the award, no awards were given out,[6] and then from 2018 to 2020, the two awards were merged.[7] In 2021, the ceremony was held online, with delivery of two awards, one political and one general.[8] Since 2022 (and as of 2026) there two sets of awards are once again given out, the "Rail Champion," for "outstanding political contributions to the advancement of rail transport," and "Rail Trailblazer," for "technical excellence and innovation."[9]

Political Awards (2007-16, 2022-)

Rail Champion (2022-)

Year Name Achievements Ref
2022 Manfred Weber Then-Chairman of the EPP, for "his legislative support of rail travel among youth" [9]
2023 Ukrainian Railways (UZ) For "remarkable resilience and continuation of transport services in war times" [10]
2024 Violeta Bulc Former EU Transport Commissioner, for "her work promoting women in transport professions" [11]
2025 Enrico Letta The former Italian Prime Minister, for his efforts "to promote rail as a key driver for European growth and prosperity" [12]
2026 Polish Presidency of the Council of the EU For delivering an exceptionally rich programme for rail." Poland held the presidency from 1 January-30 June 2025. [13]

Political Award (2007-16)

Year Name[14] Achievements
2007 Karel van Miert As European Commissioner for Transport (1989-1993), Karel van Miert laid the foundations for the creation of an integrated European railway market.
2009 Moritz Leuenberger Formerly Swiss Minister responsible for Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications, Leuenberger set out a blueprint for a sustainable transport policy in Switzerland. With the aim of transferring goods traffic from the roads to the rails, he promoted the Swiss “Heavy Vehicles Fee” (LSVA), which came into operation on 1 January 2001 on the Swiss public road network after a national referendum. To reduce Switzerland’s CO2 emissions, Leuenberger also promoted an incentive tax on fossil fuels, which entered into force at the beginning of 2008.[15]
2010 Felipe González González, former Spanish Prime Minister, was awarded for the decision to build a new, high-speed railway line between Madrid and Seville in 1986, which entered into service in 1992. He was also awarded for the implementation of the "Plan Felipe", which changed the railway's role in Spain’s big cities.[16]
2011 Ken Livingstone British Labour politician and former Mayor of London, Ken Livingstone received the award for his decision to implement the Congestion Charge in inner London on 17 February 2003.[17]
2012 Karel Vinck Vinck, former CEO of the SNCB, received the Political Award for his contributions to the development of ERTMS as the European ERTMS Corridor Coordinator. Vinck supervised the implementation of ERTMS on the six ERTMS corridors.[18]
2013 Benedikt Weibel Weibel, the CEO of Swiss Federal Railways (SBB), had a major influence on its strategic direction. He received the Political Award for his systematic and successful progress in long-distance, regional and international services. He inaugurated Rail 2000 on 12 December 2004. Under his leadership the density of trains per line kilometer doubled.[19]
2014 Jacques Barrot Former European Commissioner for Transport
2015 Lord Andrew Adonis Former UK Secretary of State for Transport
2016 Isabelle Durant Former Vice-President of the European Parliament

Rail Trailblazer (2022-)

Rail Trailblazer (2022-)

Year Name Achievements Ref
2022 Bane NOR’s ERTMS programme for "its plan to invest more than €2 billion in adopting ERTMS, and enable future digitalisation and automation" [9]
2023 Eglė Šimė CEO of LTG Cargo, for her focus on "empowering women in railways while ably steering her company through tumultuous times" [10]
2024 Danish State Railways (DSB) For "pioneering a new train operator profile for their S-trains" [11]
2025 No award given out in this category [12]
2026 Letter to the EC from members, urging the development of an EU high‑speed rail network For a "highly significant boost to the growing political momentum behind high-speed rail expansion in Europe as a lever of enhanced European mobility and economic growth" [13]

Technical Award (2007-2016)

Year Name[14] Achievements
2007 Jean Dupuy Dupuy received the Technical Award for his decisive role in designing and putting into operational service Europe’s first high-speed train, the French TGV.
2009 Bengt Sterner Sterner received his award for his leading role in initiating the UIC ETCS Project and in specifying the European Train Control System ETCS.
2010 Roland Heinisch Heinisch, a long-standing member of the executive board of Deutsche Bahn AG and head of the German infrastructure manager, has significantly contributed to the technical development of railways.[20]
2011 Stefan Haas Haas received the Technical Award for the development of eddy current brakes for high-speed train systems that became a regular feature of high-speed train travel.[17]
2012 François Lacôte Lacôte was the designer of the first TGV trains in 1971.[18]
2013 Johannes Nicolin Johannes Nicolin received the Technical Award for his innovations, especially those in intermodal freight wagons.[19]
2014 Giorgio Diana Researcher and Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Politecnico di Milano
2015 Alexander Neumeister Industrial designer
2016 Eric Fontanel Railway engineer

Other award recipients

Joint Award recipients (2017-2021)

Year Name[14] Achievements
2017 N/A No awards were handed out in 2017, for the tenth anniversary.[6]
2018 The Gotthard Base Tunnel Project The tunnel is the world's longest railway tunnel, and allowed for a modal shift of freight from road to rail.[21]
2019 Catherine Trautmann European Coordinator for the TEN-T North Sea-Baltic Corridor, former MEP, and former Mayor of Strasbourg
2020 Geert Pauwels Geert Pauwels made rail freight profitable as CEO of Lineas, by restructuring the indebted Belgian company[22]
2021 iLint hydrogen train project for "the first commercial operation of fuel-cell-powered passenger trains – for providing a viable emission-free alternative to diesel on non-electrified networks." [8]

Other Awards

Year Award Name Name[14] Achievements Ref
2021 Outstanding Poltical Contributor David Sassoli EP President, for his "leading role in the 4th Railway Package" [8]
2025 Accomplishment Award Josef Doppelbauer a former Executive Director of the European Union Agency for Railways (2015-2024) [12]
2025 Lifetime Achievement Award Dominique Riquet A former MEP, who notably led negotiations for the revision of the TEN-T regulation [12]

Press review

References

  1. ^ Transport Business "Rail sector celebrates European Railway Award", 2010
  2. ^ Community of European Railway and Infrastructure Companies "The Community of European Railway and Infrastructure Companies"CER
  3. ^ Association of the European Rail Industry "Association of the European Rail Industry"UNIFE
  4. ^ Brussels Diplomatic "European Railway Award 2013 assigned", Brussels, 27 February 2013
  5. ^ "European Railway Award 2026". UNIFE. 28 November 2025. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
  6. ^ a b "Freight innovators celebrated at European Railway Awards". The European Railway Award. 2017-08-02. Retrieved 2020-08-26.
  7. ^ "European Railway Award". The European Railway Award. 2020. Retrieved 2020-08-26.
  8. ^ a b c "iLINT hydrogen train project receives European Railway Award 2021". European Railway Award. 25 January 2021. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
  9. ^ a b c Wilson, James (2022). "European Railway Awards". EU Political Report. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
  10. ^ a b "Ukrainian Railways to receive 2023 Rail Champion Award". European Railway Award. 24 January 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
  11. ^ a b "European Year of Skills celebrated at the 2024 European Railway Award". European Railway Award. 29 January 2024. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
  12. ^ a b c d "European Railway Award". Rail Research. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
  13. ^ a b "European Railway Award 2026 celebrates collective show of commitment from EU countries united in support of rail". European Railway Award. Retrieved 19 March 2026.
  14. ^ a b c d "Previous Winners". The European Railway Award. 2020. Retrieved 2020-08-26.
  15. ^ Transport Weekly "European rail sector celebrates European Railway Award 2009", 21 January 2009
  16. ^ EurActiv, EU 'wise men' chief wants more rail, less road, EurActiv, 5 February 2010
  17. ^ a b Global Railway News "Ken Livingstone and Stefan Haas receive European Railway Award", 10 February 2011
  18. ^ a b Railway Gazette International, Awards encourage European railway integration, Railway Gazette International, 9 February 2012
  19. ^ a b European Voice"Prestigious awards at the European railways industry annual reception", 28 February 2013
  20. ^ Community of European Railways and Infrastructure Managers (CER) "Felipe González and Roland Heinisch receive European Railway Award", Press release, 3 February 2010
  21. ^ "And the winner of the 2018 European Railway Award is..." The European Railway Award. 2017-11-14. Retrieved 2020-08-26.
  22. ^ "Geert Pauwels receives European Railway Award 2020". The European Railway Award. 2020-02-18. Retrieved 2020-08-26.