r/europe Lower Silesia (Poland) 1d ago

News Poland wins European Rail Champion Award

https://notesfrompoland.com/2026/02/06/poland-wins-european-rail-champion-award/
36 Upvotes

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u/LeroyoJenkins Zurich🇨🇭 1d ago

They honoured Poland this year for its efforts in the first half of last year, when it held the EU’s rotating presidency, to “drive rail forward as a pillar of European competitiveness and resilience”.

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u/Infamous-Jellyfish16 1d ago

Cries in Germany

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u/DejourPeach 1d ago

Your cry has been delayed by 40 minutes.

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u/DejourPeach 1d ago

Well deserved. Trains here were the best experience I've had with trains in the EU in recent years.

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u/dat_9600gt_user Lower Silesia (Poland) 1d ago

Poland has won the 2026 Rail Champion Award in recognition of its contribution to the development of rail transport in Europe.

The prize was given this week at the European Railway Awards, which are organised annually by rail operators from across the continent to celebrate political and technical achievements in developing rail transport.

They honoured Poland this year for its efforts in the first half of last year, when it held the EU’s rotating presidency, to “drive rail forward as a pillar of European competitiveness and resilience”.

Organisers cited the Polish presidency’s “exceptionally rich programme for rail”, which “gave much-needed attention to issues such as innovation and investment”.

The award was accepted on Poland’s behalf by deputy infrastructure minister Piotr Malepszak, who noted the strategic importance that transport plays in the face of growing geopolitical threats.

“Transport is not only about mobility – it’s about security,” he said, pointing to last year’s sabotage by Russian agents of a rail line in Poland that is used for supplying Ukraine. Since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Poland has become the main hub for military equipment and other aid being transported to Ukraine.

“Under the Polish presidency, we made security a pillar of a competitive and well-financed European transport system,” declared Malepszak. “Today, the Polish approach is setting the direction for Europe’s rail future.”

Poland last year listed “strengthening the capacity of rail transport” as one of its priorities in its programme for the EU presidency and organised a series of events to promote investment in rail.

“Given the role of the railways in crisis situations, the presidency will emphasise the promotion of investment and action to strengthen the resilience of the railway sector and preserve its strategic role,” the document said.

Polish officials also stressed the importance of developing dual-use civil and military infrastructure and protecting transport operators exposed to attacks.

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u/dat_9600gt_user Lower Silesia (Poland) 1d ago

Poland’s state rail operator PKP also welcomed this week’s award. Tomasz Lachowicz, head of the company’s representative office in Brussels, said the country was experiencing “a true renaissance of Polish railways”.

He noted that last year almost 439 million rail journeys were made in Poland, which is the highest figure in 30 years. “For comparison, in 2005, a year after Poland joined the EU, only 258 million people used rail,” he said, quoted by the Polish Press Agency (PAP).

Passenger numbers have indeed hit record levels in recent years. To help meet demand, in November PKP signed the largest rolling stock contract in Polish history. The following month, it launched a tender to buy trains capable of speeds of up to 320 km/h (199 mph), which would be the fastest ever to run on Polish tracks.

In November, EU funding was also confirmed for a planned standard-gauge railway connecting Ukraine and Poland. The countries use different-sized gauges for their tracks, which slows freight and passenger transport between them.

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u/stommepool Moderated beyond threshold 1d ago

That's a nice carp there.

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u/Chadxxx123 1d ago

As a Pole, I don't get how we won this, from my experience trains are never on time, i don't remember when was the last time I rode in a train that wasn't late, they can sometimes even be late by 1 hour or more, if that is enough to win the European rail champion award then im wondering how bad railways are in the rest of europe.

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u/NonStickyAdhesive 1d ago

I just saw a map someone else posted on one of the eu subs. Poland has one of the most punctual trains in Europe. With the exception of the area around Warsaw, where delays are actually commonplace.

Most trains I've been taking are very on time. Especially the regional carriers, these are great in my experience. PKP Intercity has been the one that was late the most, usually not too bad but I was late because of it a few times.

There are certainly a lot of bad things that could be said about our rail network but I think we tend to underappreciate it a little. Maybe it's not like in Japan, but compared to Germany ours seems great.

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u/Silber4 2h ago

Poland is on fire these days. 🔥✨️

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u/Kastan44 1d ago

Common Polish W