Europe 1 with AFP 8:53 am, January 08, 2022

SNCF will cut 10% of its TGVs and 20% of Intercités from next week due to the drop in reservations linked to the 5th wave of Covid-19.

Travelers affected by train cancellations will be contacted and may change their ticket or be reimbursed.

SNCF will cut 10% of its TGV and 20% of Intercités from next week, announced a spokesperson on Friday, explaining this measure by a drop in reservations due to the health crisis. "Taking into account a 30% drop in reservations since the start of the year - particularly during the week - the TGV transport plan will be adapted from next week and provided for 90% of the planned offer, and 80% for Intercités, "said a spokesperson for SNCF Voyageurs.

All night trains will be provided, while "the adaptation of the offer will be stronger" for international TGVs, in particular for the cross-Channel Eurostar service "which will run at less than 10% of the planned supply".

Travelers whose trains are canceled will be contacted and will be able to change their ticket or be reimbursed, he assured.

The effects of the 5th wave

The SNCF, whose travelers had largely returned during the Christmas holidays, has already downsized several times since the start of the health crisis. "It is not a question of unexpected train cancellations but of adapted transport plans, which can take into account the lower frequentation of travelers (...) but also of the objective of ensuring a most reliable transport plan for travelers, taking into account the effects of reduced availability of SNCF staff affected by the Covid ", explained the spokesperson on Friday.

"Like any employer, we are indeed confronted at the scale of the SNCF group (SNCF Voyageurs, SNCF Réseau, SNCF Gares & Connexions) with the effects of this 5th Covid wave, but neither more nor less than the rest of the company", he clarified. At the regional level, the TER have been affected for several weeks by "local adaptations" of transport plans. "On average, more than 90% of TERs continue to circulate nationally at present," according to the spokesperson.

As for suburban trains in the Paris region, "the Transilien transport plan will be almost normal in the coming days and could be slightly adapted next week depending on the lines depending on the health situation and the availability of SNCF agents", he warned.