SNCF strike: traffic forecasts for this Wednesday, December 7

SNCF strike traffic forecasts for this Wednesday December 7

SNCF. TGV, TER, Intercités, Transilien… The SNCF revealed the details of the disruptions expected on the French rail on Wednesday December 7, 2022 on the occasion of a new day of strike.

[Mis à jour le 6 décembre 2022 à 23h11] Opening of the mandatory annual negotiations for wages obliges, three unions call for a new day of strike at the SNCF on Wednesday, December 7, 2022. The CGT-Cheminots, SUD-Rail and the CFDT indeed intend to put pressure. However, after a weekend already marked by mobilization, this Wednesday’s SNCF strike should not cause too much disruption on French rail. However, some travelers will still be impacted. Some TER, Transilien, TGV and Intercités users will be affected. The direction of the SNCF specified in detail these disruptions in a communicated.

Regarding the main lines, on the TGV, only trains from the south of Bordeaux and Paris-Lyon are concerned. As for the Intercités, Paris-Clermont and Lyon-Nantes are the only axes affected by these disturbances. On the TER, disruptions are to be expected in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, Grand Est, Occitanie and Provence-Alpes-Côte-d’Azur regions. Finally, in the Paris suburbs, lines C, D, N and R of the RER and Transilien will be disrupted. TGV and Intercités users will have received an email or an SMS informing them if their train is canceled or maintained. With regard to the other lines, find the details of the disruptions below:

The TGVs on the Paris-Lyon axis and south of Bordeaux and the Intercités on the Paris-Clermont and Lyon-Nantes axes are very disrupted this Wednesday, December 7, 2022. The disruptions also concern many TERs. On the Ile-de-France side, Transilien and RER managed by SNCF are disrupted until the end of service. Here are the predictions line by line:

  • TGV disruptions : the axes of the TGV Paris-Lyon and south of Bordeaux are disrupted this Wednesday, December 7.
  • TER disturbances : The Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, Grand Est, Occitanie and Provence-Alpes-Côte-d’Azur axes are disrupted. The following TER on the Paris-Lyon axis are removed:
  • Paris Lyon, departure 5.12 p.m. – Montereau, arrival 6.03 p.m. (Laroche Migennes, arrival 7.09 p.m.)
  • Paris Lyon, departure 6:12 p.m. – Montereau, arrival 7:03 p.m. (Laroche Migennes, arrival 8:09 p.m.)
  • Paris Lyon, departure 7:46 p.m. – Montereau, arrival 8:44 p.m. (Laroche Migennes, arrival 9:49 p.m.)
  • (Laroche Migennes, arrival 12:10 p.m.) – Montereau, departure 1:16 p.m. – Paris Lyon, arrival 2:13 p.m.
  • (Laroche Migennes, arrival 2:10 p.m.) – Montereau, departure 3:15 p.m. – Paris Lyon, arrival 4:13 p.m.
  • More information on the TER website. To monitor general regional train traffic disruptions, this page will be useful to you.
  • Intercity disruptions : the Intercités on the Paris-Clermont and Lyon-Nantes axes are very disrupted. Consult this page for real-time information.
  • RER A disruptions : normal traffic this Wednesday 7 December.
  • RER B disruptions : normal traffic this Wednesday 7 December.
  • RER C disruptions : plan 3 out of 4 trains this Wednesday 7 December.
  • RER D disruptions : plan 1 out of 2 trains this Wednesday 7 December.
  • RER E disruptions : normal traffic this Wednesday 7 December.
  • Transilien disruptions: this Friday, December 7, 2022, traffic is slightly disrupted on line N and train cancellations on line R. For the Transilien network, there is a dedicated platform to follow the next traffic disruptions or you can call 0 805 90 36 35.

This united strike of December 7, 2022 began this Tuesday, December 6 in the evening. Indeed, the notice given by SOUTH-Rail covers the period from December 6 at 8 p.m. to December 8 at 8 a.m.

If, by the end of the year, the controllers and the unions do not succeed in winning their case, new strikes could hit the French rail transport network during the Christmas holidays, a period when many French people take the train. Indeed, if the strike movement last weekend did not start from the SNCF unions, but from a collective of controllers, four unions have since given their support to the movement: Unsa, SUD-Rail, CFDT and FO locally.

The four unions have filed strike notices for the weekends of Friday December 23 to Monday December 26 and from Friday December 30 to Monday January 2, with the aim of putting pressure on the negotiations with the SNCF. Saturday, December 3, the Minister of Transport Clément Beaune nevertheless wanted to put this scenario of paralysis of transport for the end of year celebrations into perspective. “I can’t bring myself to have things written down,” he said, calling for “collective responsibility”, according to comments reported by BFM TV. “The week is decisive”, announced the national secretary at the CFDT-railway workers Sabine Le Toquin. “We will know if Christmas is in danger or not. The ball is in the company’s court”.

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