If the trend of the last years can not be broken, road and air transport will be the main winners of enlargement by drastically increasing their share in the liberalised market during the next decades, thus putting increased pressure on the environment.
Trans-European Transport networks
The aim is that the ten Trans-European Transport Networks (TEN-T) expanding to the the new Member States are integrated in an efficient and sustainable transport network. These projects are expected to produce time savings and reduce the growing problem of pollution. According to recent research carried out for the Commission, it would boost the growth potential of the enlarged EU and create up thousands of new jobs.
These projects are:
- "Rail Baltica" axis Warsaw-Kaunas-Riga-Tallinn-Helsinki
- Railway axis Gdansk-Warsaw-Brno/Bratislava-Vienna
- Railway axis Athens-Sofia-Budapest-Vienna-Prague-Nürnberg/Dresden
- Railway axis Lyon-Trieste-Divaca/Koper-Divaca-Ljubljana-Budapest-Ukrainian border
- Railway axis Paris-Strasbourg-Stuttgart-Vienna-Bratislava
- Nordic triangle railway/road axis
- Motorway axis Igoumenitsa/Patra-Athens-Sofia-Budapest
- Motorway axis Gdansk-Brno/Bratislava-Vienna
- Rhine/Meuse-Main-Danube inland waterway axis
- Motorways of the seas for Cyprus and Malta
Rail
Central European Countries have a long rail history and a dense rail network. The share of freight transport by rail is still significantly higher than in the EU-15. However, since 1990 railway transport in the accession countries has decreased. Market share of railways fell considerably as a result. As within the EU-15, the accession countries face interoperability problems, e.g. with different signalling systems or the different gauge systems in Central Europe and in the Baltic States.



