Journey times and daily train frequency:
From Paris • Paris–
Lille 1:00/24 • Paris–
Douai 1:09/10 • Paris–
Valenciennes 1:42/10 • Paris–
Arras 0:49/9 • Paris–
Dunkirk 1:38/9 • Paris–
Lens 1:05/7 • Paris–
Béthune 1:15/7 • Paris–
Calais 1:23/5 • Paris–
Cambrai 1:40/1 • Paris–
St-Omer 1:56/1 • Paris–
Boulogne 1:57/1
Inter-regional •
Lyon–Lille 2:48/11 • Lyon–
Arras 2:46/3 • Lyon–
Brussels 3:40/2 •
Nantes–Lille 3:53/4 •
Rennes–Lille 3:49/4 •
Bordeaux–Lille 5:00/5
International • Paris – London 2:15 • Paris –
Brussels 1:20 • London -
Marne-la-Vallee - Chessy (for
Disneyland Paris) 2:43 •
London - Marseille: 6:28 • Paris –
Liège 2:10 • Paris –
Cologne 3:14 • Paris –
Amsterdam 3:18 •
Lille – London 1:20 • Amsterdam - London - 3:55
Future services At present, only Deutsche Bahn has applied for use of the line and in 2009 regulations were relaxed to allow its trains to use the Channel Tunnel. Other proposals are yet to be formalised.
Deutsche Bahn In 2009,
Eurotunnel (the owners of the Channel Tunnel) announced that it was prepared to start relaxing the
fire safety regulations, in order to permit other operators, such as Deutsche Bahn, to transport passengers via the Tunnel using other forms of rolling stock via LGV Nord. Under the deregulation of European railway service, high-speed lines were opened up to open access on 1 January 2010; the Inter-Governmental Commission on the Channel Tunnel (IGC) announced that it was considering relaxing the safety requirements concerning train splitting. LCR suggested that high-speed rail services between London and Cologne could commence before the 2012 Olympics. As of March 2010 Eurotunnel,
High Speed 1, DB and other interested train operators formed a working group to discuss changes to the safety rules, including allowing DB's trains through the tunnel on a Frankfurt to London service. Deutsche Bahn hope to run an ICE 3 train through the Channel Tunnel on 19 October 2010, in preparation for possible future operations. The current Velaro
ICE3 sets do not meet the fire safety requirements necessary for the carriage of passengers through the Channel Tunnel, but the
Siemens Velaro D sets on order include the necessary additional fire-proofing.
Veolia train would cut journey times to London In September 2008,
Air France-KLM indicated a desire to take advantage of the change in the law and apply to run rail services. However, in October 2009, Air France withdrew its interest. This led to Veolia looking for new partners, with the announcement that it would begin working on new proposals in cooperation with
Trenitalia to run services from Paris to Strasbourg, London and Brussels.
Renfe Spanish railway operator
RENFE has also shown an interest in running
AVE services from Madrid to London via Barcelona,
Lyon and Paris on its
AVE network, which connects to the French network via the
Barcelona to Figueras and
Perpignan to Figueras lines. ==See also==