A symbol for more climate protection: Noah’s Train comes to Berlin

A symbol for more climate protection: Noah’s Train comes to Berlin


Noah’s Train, the world’s longest mobile work of art, which is currently travelling through Europe, recently made a stop in Berlin. Europe’s freight operating companies are using this special train, which is named after Noah’s Ark, to promote moving more traffic to the railways in the interests of the environment. At each station, prominent street artists spray-paint two containers with animal motifs.

The Rail Freight Forward initiative launched by Europe’s freight operating companies aims to increase the railways’ share of freight transport in Europe from 18 percent to 30 percent by 2030. Among the guests welcoming the train at Berlin’s Gesundbrunnen station was the Federal Minister for the Environment Svenja Schulze, who supports the initiative.

Alexander Doll, Member of the Management Board for Finance, Freight Transport and Logistics at DB said: “Train users protect the environment, in both passenger and freight transport. Through DB Cargo’s operations alone we currently save some five million tonnes of CO2 emissions annually. This is more or less the amount of CO2 that the cities of Aachen and Kassel produce together in a year.”

“We are working with our European partners to change the transport mix of the future,” said Dr Roland Bosch, CEO of DB Cargo. “If the 30 percent more freight forecast for Europe by 2030 was transported only by road, this would mean a million extra lorries, more traffic jams and more harmful carbon emissions. The decarbonisation of transport can only succeed if we put more freight on the rails.”

Joachim Berends, vice-president at the Association of German Transport Companies (VDV) said: “On long routes, electric rail freight transport is the only economically and ecologically viable alternative to lorries. So rail’s market share has to grow much more strongly, especially in freight, if we are to get anywhere near meeting the commitments made in the Paris Agreement. This is why the VDV supports the Rail Freight Forward campaign with its ambitious goal of achieving a 30 percent modal share for rail freight transport.”

Noah’s Train departed from the Polish city of Katowice in mid-December following the UN Climate Change Conference and continued via Vienna to Berlin. The next stop the train will make will be Brussels on February 20.

For more information visit www.railfreightforward.eu

11th February 2019