Overland Heaven is now in full swing and the team at Forum is busy looking at the options available for overland travel to five destinations across Europe.
Most travellers are aware that they should be flying less due to air travel’s substantial contribution to climate change, but in practice this is easier said than done. There are very few ‘easy’ alternatives. As we’re finding out, booking air travel is accessible, quick and relatively simple – so why can’t booking a train or a coach to Seville be just as easy? This is what we’re trying to get to the bottom of through Overland Heaven.
We want to find ways to make overland travel productive, enjoyable and easy to book. We’d like to see travelling overland as the preferable choice over flying, harnessing its advantages such as central departures and arrivals, scenic routes, flexibility, lack of queues and security restrictions… the list goes on. Overland Heaven is all about creating ways to make the journey part of the holiday or business trip, not just a means for getting there.
We welcome any thoughts or insights as to why the travel industry isn't already doing more to promote and sell overland holidays. Are there techical or legal barriers that make overland holidays difficult to arrange? Or is it simply a question of supply and demand? Could the industry do more to create a market for overland holidays? Post your thoughts here.
Comments
benefits?
what are the co2 benefits of going to Europe overland instead of flying? The Radiative Forcing Index is either included or drop depending on which report you refer to (e.g. the penultimate IPPC report) and basic co2 conversions (e.g. DEFRA) seem to side towards flying.
I'm a dedicated environmentalist and don't mean to be negative. I'm just a little confused.
Shane
Re: benefits
Hi Shane
Even without a Radiative Forcing factor, which is often estimated to at least double the climate impact of flying, overland travel is almost always lower carbon. You mention DEFRA figures - these put rail at 60gCO2/passenger km, which is less than half that of short haul flights (130g CO2 alone).
Even with indirect routings our Overland Heaven project finds that switching to trains - or even coaches - normally saves at least half the carbon. And aircraft can also only use fossil fuels, while trains can use low carbon electricity which may bring their emissions down much further.
Still, there are even worse ways to travel - one person in a 4x4 could be responsible for more than 350g/km!
Overland Heaven
Overland Heaven is going to be a hard sell. That is unless you've got lots of time, lots of money and lots of patience. I live in Northern Italy and I'm heading to Reconnections in the Lake District next month. Outbound I'm flying and the train to Treviso combined with Ryan Air cost me EUR 55. The train to Windermere was an additional EUR 23. I decided to return home by overland Heaven, slowly, to give a little extra time to reflect on the course and let it sink in. Apart from it being a real pain to arrange, it literally took hours, it's expensive. EUR 215 all combined, if I hadn't gone to my local train station to buy the Paris Vicenza bit 3 months in advance, the price would have been over EUR 300. There's undoubtedly a market for a travel agent to simplify the process but they'll need to work out a way to cut out cost rather than add it.
Why the European rail network ain't all it's cracked up to be..
or at least the booking part.
Our family are going to Nice this summer. Rather than the easyjet grind I've forced the trains are more fun/reduce our carbon footprint/cost no more argument.
My wife has spent frazzled latenight hours on a laptop trying out evermore permutations and we've come to the conclusion that the pricing structure is being controlled by somebody very warped
After a nightmare booking process, with affordable tickets being released in minutely small quantities exactly three months before you travel. Meaning that you have to buy each part of your ticket seperately.
The London to Paris single leg of the journey is hugely more expensive than a return on the sameday, so obviously we've bought a return and there'll be four empty seats coming back. The single is also three times dearer than Paris to Nice.
Total cost of our rail journey will be twice that of flying. Which is OK as I'm committed (or should be now). But the whole booking process has proved so complicated, it's hard to recommend to friends thinking of trying the train..
Still, cant wait though!
Overland through Europe by river
A fabulous way to see Europe in leisurely and environmentally friendly way is travel by boat. A river cruise along the Rhine or Danube takes you to some great places, famous cities like Cologne and Budapest and also lots of riverside towns and villages that are not on the usual tourist trail. River cruises through Europe are a great no-fly option for a holiday and have the additional advantage that you only unpack once as your 'hotel' room travels with you. Take a look at the selection of river cruise or hotel barge opportunities on a new website, http://www.ewaterways.com which specialises in small ship cruising.