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French rail link between Bordeaux and Lyon ‘to return in 2024’

A co-operative rail business has unveiled plans to relaunch a cross-country French rail service that SNCF abandoned in 2014 - if it can raise €4.1 million

French rail link between Bordeaux and Lyon 'to return in 2024'
Bordeaux's St-Jean train station. (Photo by MEHDI FEDOUACH / AFP)

Trains could start running between the French cities of Bordeaux and Lyon for the first time in a decade, if a co-operative business has its way.

Railcoop, a co-operative of 13,771 members including a number of local authorities, has been running freight services since 2021 after the French rail network was opened up to new services. It intends to start running direct trains between the two cities from June 2024.

At present customers using SNCF services from Bordeaux to Lyon cannot go direct and must instead travel via Paris.

The €4.1 million in funding is required to cover necessary tangible and intangible investments, including the purchase of an additional X72500 three-coach train, Railcoop said in a statement following a meeting of its members.

It is currently raising funds in two ways, one in shares (via its website) and the other in equity securities, aimed at members and non-members (on the Lita.co platform).

Under early plans, the 7.5-hour journey – Railcoop’s first passenger service, which will include stops at Périgueux, Limoges, Guéret, Montluçon, and Roanne – will initially be limited to a single one-way trip per day, followed by a return journey the following day. Eventually, Railcoop hopes to offer two round-trips a day.

Customers will be able to buy tickets on trains and through Railcoop’s partners. The decision to launch this restricted rail line in the summer of 2024 was ratified by a vote of Railcoop’s members at a general meeting on February 22.

SNCF stopped running services between Bordeaux and Lyon in 2014, because it was no longer profitable.

At the same time, Railcoop is continuing to roll out its freight service. Its trains now run on a weekly basis between Capdenac (Aveyron) and Saint Gaudens (Haute-Garonne) via Toulouse St-Jory. An additional service to Gignac will launch shortly.

The co-operative is one of several companies running services on French railways since the government opened up competition with the State-owned SNCF. 

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LIVING IN FRANCE

Explained: What to do if you leave your belongings on a train in France

Here's a look at the steps you should take if you discover that you have left an important or treasured item on a French train.

Explained: What to do if you leave your belongings on a train in France

We’ve all done it. You get home, or to your hotel or office to realise that, when you got off the train, you forgot to pick up your wallet, laptop, or tablet or sometimes even items of luggage.

Or – every parent’s nightmare – one of your children has left behind their beloved cuddly toy, and only realises as the train you’ve just got off leaves the station.

The good news is that all is not, necessarily, lost. 

The first step is to report the missing item to SNCF. You can do this at the station, but if you’ve got home before you realise something is missing, you can report lost property online (you can change the language of the website).

You will need to describe what you’ve lost, when you lost it, and which train you were travelling on – as well as giving your contact details. 

What happens next

First of all, you will be given a declaration number. Keep it safe – it allows you to track the progress of SNCF’s search for your lost property.

Even so – we have to be honest – the investigation relies a fair bit on good fortune. If your lost property is found on the train by a member of staff, or handed in at a station, then there’s a good chance you’ll get it back. 

It may be that your lost property has already been handed in. If so, it will be registered on SNCF’s national lost property database and kept for 30 days at the station where the item was picked up or, for items forgotten on a train, at the station where they arrived.

Deadline

The database is monitored in real-time matching found items with reports of lost property. When your property has been located, you will be informed, and can go to the station where it is stored, or have it sent to your home address, subject to a shipping charge.

If you do collect it from the station, take along proof of ID – and expect to pay a fee of up to €10, depending on the value of the property you have reported missing.

And, after 30 days?

If items of lost property are not claimed after 30 days, it may be handed over to the government’s Administration des domaines, sold to a charitable organisation or destroyed.

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