Europe’s Rail Newsletter – November Edition This month’s EU-Rail Newsletter is packed with fresh insights, key...

On 21 June 2024, the Governing Board of Europe’s Rail Joint Undertaking (EU-Rail) adopted a Call for Expression of Interest (CEI) with a view to selecting associated members with the potential to contribute to the achievement of its objectives. The Governing Board decision can be accessed here.
Discover detailed information about procurment rules and information.
Access detailed information about past tenders.

Europe's Rail regularly published Calls for Tenders. To find out about open Calls, follow link below.

Article 15 (Principle of transparency) of the EU-Rail financial rules states that the JU shall make available on its internet site no later than 30 June of the following financial year information on the recipients of funds deriving from its budget.
EU-Rail’s Innovation Pillar (IP) is tasked to deliver operational and technological solutions that contribute to a more efficient, flexible, and demand-led, yet safe and environmentally sustainable European railway system.
The System Pillar provides governance, resource, and outputs to support a coherent and coordinated approach to the evolution of the rail system and the development of the system view.
The Deployment Group advises the EU-Rail Governing Board on the market uptake of rail innovation developments and support their deployment.
For a successful and effective implementation of the Digital Automatic Coupler for European rail freight (DAC), it is of crucial importance to have open, close and efficient cooperation between rail stakeholders. The European DAC Delivery Programme enabled by Europe’s Rail, offers a unique European platform for such cooperation and collaboration.
Discover how Europe’s Rail Joint Undertaking is calling for a bold, coordinated investment strategy to simplify and modernise rail systems across the EU. This public-private partnership model – outlined in our High-Level Paper – proposes an €18 billion investment from 2028 to 2034 to strengthen European competitiveness, deliver greener transport, and drive technological sovereignty.

Discover detailed information on Europe's rail innovation initiatives, showcasing flagship and other projects aimed at enhancing rail systems across Europe. It highlights collaborative efforts funded by the European Union to develop sustainable, efficient, and competitive rail transport solutions.

Europe’s Rail Catalogue of Solutions illustrates successful R&I results in the form of possible products and solutions, while highlighting the benefits for final users, operators, infrastructure managers and/or suppliers. This publication also outlines the advantages of integrating demonstrators into market solutions so that they can deliver the rail innovation Capabilities of the future.
Nov 20, 2025
The Europe’s Rail Joint Undertaking is working toward a harmonised and more efficient European railway system through automation and digitalisation. Within FP2 R2DATO, several industry partners (Hitachi, Alstom, DB, SBB, ÖBB, etc.) are developing a demonstrator for a future traffic control and supervision system based on a new geometric, train-oriented safety logic. Unlike today’s fixed-point-based safety systems (signals, marker boards), this approach authorizes train movements dynamically, without predefined points, simplifying planning, reducing engineering effort, and potentially increasing capacity. The system also allows multiple trains to use the same track circuit when integrity monitoring is available.
The demonstrator, tested at DB’s digital testbed in the Ore Mountains (Germany), is built around three components: a digital register (data storage/distribution), a plan execution system (converting timetables into movement requests), and the European Trackside Protection System (safety core granting or rejecting movement permissions). Hitachi provides the plan execution system and and the European Trackside Protection System.
Both simulation and field tests are used. Simulation enables early, cost-efficient, and automated testing, while field tests validate functionalities that cannot be simulated, such as real-world radio communication (FMRCS) and switch control. Two test vehicles equipped with ETCS onboard units are used.
The results demonstrate that the new architecture and safety logic work reliably in real-world conditions and can increase capacity by enabling operations at absolute braking distances, contributing to a more efficient and modern European railway system.