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Document 32009D0460

    2009/460/EC: Commission Decision of 5 June 2009 on the adoption of a common safety method for assessment of achievement of safety targets, as referred to in Article 6 of Directive 2004/49/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (notified under document number C(2009) 4246) (Text with EEA relevance)

    OJ L 150, 13.6.2009, p. 11–19 (BG, ES, CS, DA, DE, ET, EL, EN, FR, IT, LV, LT, HU, MT, NL, PL, PT, RO, SK, SL, FI, SV)

    This document has been published in a special edition(s) (HR)

    Legal status of the document In force

    ELI: http://data.europa.eu/eli/dec/2009/460/oj

    13.6.2009   

    EN

    Official Journal of the European Union

    L 150/11


    COMMISSION DECISION

    of 5 June 2009

    on the adoption of a common safety method for assessment of achievement of safety targets, as referred to in Article 6 of Directive 2004/49/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council

    (notified under document number C(2009) 4246)

    (Text with EEA relevance)

    (2009/460/EC)

    THE COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES,

    Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community,

    Having regard to Directive 2004/49/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on safety on the Community’s railways and amending Council Directive 95/18/EC on the licensing of railway undertakings and Directive 2001/14/EC on the allocation of railway infrastructure capacity and the levying of charges for the use of railway infrastructure and safety certification (Railway Safety Directive) (1) and in particular Article 6(1) thereof,

    Having regard to the recommendation of the European Railway Agency on the common safety methods for calculation, assessment and enforcement to be used in the framework of the first set of common safety targets, delivered to the Commission on 29 April 2008,

    Whereas:

    (1)

    In accordance with Directive 2004/49/EC, common safety targets (CSTs) and common safety methods (CSMs) should be gradually introduced to ensure that a high level of safety is maintained and, when and where necessary and reasonably practicable, improved.

    (2)

    Pursuant to Article 6(1) of Directive 2004/49/EC, the European Commission should adopt CSMs. These should describe, amongst others and in accordance with Article 6(3) of Directive 2004/49/EC, how the safety level and achievement of CSTs are assessed.

    (3)

    In order to ensure that the current safety performance of the railway system is not reduced in any Member State, the first set of CSTs should be introduced. It should be based on an examination of existing targets and safety performance of railway systems in the Member States.

    (4)

    Furthermore, in order to maintain the current safety performance of the railway system, a harmonisation, in terms of risk acceptance criteria, of safety levels for the whole national railway systems is necessary. The compliance with safety levels should be monitored in the different Member States.

    (5)

    In order to establish the first set of CSTs in compliance with Article 7(3) of Directive 2004/49/EC, it is necessary to quantitatively identify the current safety performance of railway systems in Member States by means of national reference values (NRVs), to be calculated and utilised by the European Railway Agency (the Agency) and the Commission. These NRVs should be calculated only in 2009, with a view to developing the first set of CSTs, and in 2011, with a view to developing the second set of CSTs.

    (6)

    In order to ensure consistency of the NRVs and to avoid undue burden, light rail systems, functionally separate networks, privately owned railway infrastructures solely used by the owner, heritage, museum and tourist railways should be exempted from this Decision.

    (7)

    Due to the lack of harmonised and reliable data on safety performance of parts of the railway system referred to in Article 7(4) of Directive 2004/49/EC, it has been ascertained that the development of the first set of CSTs, expressed in risk acceptance criteria for specified categories of individuals and for society as a whole, is at the moment feasible only for the railway system in its entirety and not for its parts.

    (8)

    Following the progressive harmonisation of national statistical data on accidents and related consequences, in compliance with Regulation (EC) No 91/2003 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 2002 on rail transport statistics (2) and Directive 2004/49/EC, the development of common methods for monitoring and targeting safety performance of railway systems in Member States should take account of statistical uncertainties and the need for an element of judgement in deciding whether a Member State’s safety performance is maintained.

    (9)

    To allow a fair and transparent comparison of railway safety performance amongst Member States, Member States should perform their own assessments on the basis of a common approach for identifying the safety targets of the railway system and for demonstrating compliance with them.

    (10)

    The measures provided for in this Decision are in accordance with the opinion of the Committee established in compliance with Article 27(1) of Directive 2004/49/EC,

    HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION:

    Article 1

    Subject matter

    This Decision establishes a common safety method to be used by the European Railway Agency (hereafter ‘the Agency’) for calculating and assessing the achievement of common safety targets (CSTs), in application of Article 6(1) of Directive 2004/49/EC.

    Article 2

    Scope

    This Decision shall apply to the whole railway system within each of the Member States. However it shall not apply to:

    (a)

    metros, trams and other light rail systems;

    (b)

    networks that are functionally separate from the rest of the railway system and intended only for the operation of local, urban or suburban passenger services, as well as railway undertakings operating solely on these networks;

    (c)

    privately owned railway infrastructure that exists solely for use by the infrastructure owner for its own freight operations;

    (d)

    heritage vehicles that run on national networks providing that they comply with national safety rules and regulations with a view to ensuring safe circulation of such vehicles;

    (e)

    heritage, museum and tourist railways that operate on their own network, including workshops, vehicles and staff.

    Article 3

    Definitions

    For the purposes of this Decision, definitions of Directive 2004/49/EC and Regulation (EC) No 91/2003 shall apply.

    In addition, the following definitions shall apply:

    (a)

    ‘national reference value (NRV)’ means a reference measure indicating, for the Member State concerned, the maximum tolerable level for a railway risk category;

    (b)

    ‘risk category’ means one of the railway risk categories specified by Article 7(4)(a) and (b) of Directive 2004/49/EC;

    (c)

    ‘safety enhancement plan’ means a schedule to implement the organisational structure, responsibilities, procedures, activities, capabilities and resources required to reduce the risk for one or more risk categories;

    (d)

    ‘fatalities and weighted serious injuries (FWSIs)’ means a measurement of the consequences of significant accidents combining fatalities and serious injuries, where 1 serious injury is considered statistically equivalent to 0,1 fatalities;

    (e)

    ‘level crossing users’ means all persons using a level crossing to cross the railway line by any means of transportation or by foot;

    (f)

    ‘staff’ or ‘employees including the staff of contractors’ means any persons whose employment is in connection with a railway and is at work at the moment of the accident; it includes the crew of the train and persons handling rolling stock and infrastructure installations;

    (g)

    ‘unauthorised persons on railway premises’ means any persons present on railway premises where such presence is forbidden, with the exception of level crossing users;

    (h)

    ‘others (third parties)’ means all persons not defined as ‘passengers’, ‘employees including the staff of contractors’, ‘level crossing users’ or ‘unauthorised persons on railway premises’;

    (i)

    ‘risk to the society as a whole’ means the collective risk to all categories of persons listed in Article 7(4)(a) of Directive 2004/49/EC;

    (j)

    ‘passenger train-km’ means the unit of measure representing the movement of a passenger train over one kilometre; only the distance on the national territory of the reporting country shall be taken into account;

    (k)

    ‘track-km’ means the length measured in kilometres of the railway network in Member States where each track of a multiple track railway line is to be counted.

    Article 4

    Methodologies to calculate NRVs and CSTs and to assess their achievement

    1.   The methodology described in the Annex shall apply for calculating and assessing the achievements of NRVs and CSTs.

    2.   The Agency shall propose to the Commission NRVs calculated in accordance with section 2.1 of the Annex and CSTs derived from the NRVs, in accordance with the methodology set out in section 2.2 of the Annex. After adoption of NRVs and CSTs by the Commission, the Agency shall assess their achievement by Member States in compliance with chapter 3 of the Annex.

    3.   The assessment of the estimated costs and benefits of CSTs referred to in Article 7(3) of Directive 2004/49/EC shall be limited to those Member States whose NRVs, for any of the risk categories, are found to be higher than the corresponding CSTs.

    Article 5

    Enforcement actions

    In accordance with the different final results of the assessment of achievement, referred to in point 3.1.5 of the Annex, the following enforcement actions shall be taken:

    (a)

    in case of ‘possible deterioration of safety performance’: the Member State/s concerned shall send to the Commission a report explaining the likely causes of the results obtained;

    (b)

    in case of ‘probable deterioration of safety performance’: the Member State/s concerned shall send to the Commission a report explaining the likely causes of the results obtained and submit, if appropriate, a safety enhancement plan.

    In order to evaluate any information and evidences provided by Member States in accordance with the process referred to in points (a) and (b), the Commission may ask the Agency to provide technical opinions.

    Article 6

    Addressees

    This Decision is addressed to the Member States.

    Done at Brussels, 5 June 2009.

    For the Commission

    Antonio TAJANI

    Vice-President


    (1)   OJ L 164, 30.4.2004, p. 44; corrected by OJ L 220, 21.6.2004, p. 16.

    (2)   OJ L 14, 21.1.2003, p. 1.


    ANNEX

    1.   Statistical sources and measurement units for calculating NRVs and CSTs

    1.1.   Statistical sources

    1.1.1.

    The NRVs and the CSTs shall be calculated on the basis of data on railway accidents and related consequences, reported according to Annex H to Regulation (EC) No 91/2003 and according to provisions of Articles 5, 18 and Annex I to Directive 2004/49/EC.

    1.1.2.

    Within the framework of determining the first set of CSTs, in case of inconsistencies between data coming from the two sources referred to in point 1.1.1, data reported according to Annex H to Regulation (EC) No 91/2003 shall have precedence.

    1.1.3.

    The time series of data which will be used for attributing values to NRVs and CSTs shall include the four most recent reported years. No later than 31 January 2011 the Agency shall propose to the Commission the adoption of updated values for NRVs and CSTs, calculated from data for the six most recent reported years.

    1.2.   Measurement units for NRVs

    1.2.1.

    The measurement units for NRVs shall be expressed in compliance with the mathematical definition of risk. The consequences of accidents which shall be considered for each of the risk categories are the FWSIs.

    1.2.2.

    The measurement units which shall be used for quantifying NRVs for each of the risk categories are laid down in Appendix 1 and result from the application of the principles and definitions referred to in point 1.2.1 and, where relevant, point 1.2.3. The measurement units include the scaling bases listed in Appendix 1, for the normalisation of NRVs.

    1.2.3.

    For each of the risk categories ‘passengers’ and ‘level crossing users’ two different NRVs shall be set, expressed with the two different measurement units referred to in Appendix 1. For the purposes of the assessment of achievement referred to in chapter 3, compliance with at least one of these NRVs shall be considered sufficient.

    1.3.   Measurement units for CSTs

    1.3.1.

    The measurement units to be used for quantifying CSTs for each of the risk categories shall be the same as the ones described for NRVs in section 1.2.

    2.   Methodology for calculating NRVs and for deriving CSTs

    2.1.   Methodology for calculating NRVs

    2.1.1.

    For each Member State and for each of the risk categories the NRV shall be calculated by applying in sequential order the following process:

    (a)

    calculation of the values returned by the corresponding measurement units listed in Appendix 1, by considering the data and provisions referred to in section 1.1;

    (b)

    analysis of the results of the process described in point (a), to check presence and recurrence of zero values for the FWSIs in the observed safety performances for the years concerned;

    (c)

    if the zero values referred to in point (b) are no more than two, the calculation is made of the weighted average of the values referred to in point (a), as described in section 2.3, and the returned value is taken as the NRV;

    (d)

    if the zero values referred to in point (b) are more than two, the Agency shall attribute to the NRV a discretional value to be identified by consulting the Member State concerned.

    2.2.   Methodology for deriving CSTs from NRVs

    2.2.1.

    For each of the risk categories, once the NRV has been calculated for each Member State according to the procedure laid down by section 2.1, the corresponding CST shall be assigned a value equal to the lower of:

    (a)

    the value of the NRV which is the highest amongst the Member States;

    (b)

    the value equal to 10 times the European average value of the risk to which the considered NRV refers.

    2.2.2.

    The European average referred to in point 2.2.1(b) shall be calculated by cumulating the relevant data for all the Member States and by using the corresponding measurement units listed in Appendix 1, as well as the weighted average described in section 2.3.

    2.3.   Weighted averaging process for the calculation of NRVs

    2.3.1.

    For each Member State and for each of the risk categories to which the weighted averaging can be applied according to point 2.1.1(c), the following steps shall be applied for calculating, during year Y (where Y = 2009 and 2011), the NRVY:

    (a)

    calculation of the annual observations OBSi (where i is the considered year of observation) returned by the corresponding measurement units listed in Appendix 1, after providing as input the data for the most recent reported n years as referred to in point 2.1.1(a) [initially n = 4; from 2011 onwards n = 6];

    (b)

    calculation of the arithmetic n-year average (AV) of annual observations OBSi ;

    (c)

    calculation of the absolute value of the difference ABSDIFFi between each annual observation OBSi and the AV. If ABSDIFFi < 0,01 * AV, to ABSDIFFi is attributed a constant value equal to 0,01 * AV;

    (d)

    calculation of the weight (Wi ) for each single year i, by taking the inverse of ABSDIFFi ;

    (e)

    calculation of the NRVY in the form of weighted average, as follows:

    Formula
    ;

    where i is a natural number and

    if Y = 2009: x = Y – 5; N = Y – 2

    if Y = 2011: x = Y – 7; N = Y – 2

    3.   Framework model for the assessment of achievement of NRVs and CSTs

    3.1.   Methodology for assessing achievement of NRVs and CSTs

    3.1.1.

    The following principles shall apply for assessing achievement of NRVs and CSTs:

    (a)

    for each Member State and for each of the risk categories whose respective NRV is equal to or lower than the corresponding CST, the achievement of the NRV will also automatically imply the achievement of the CST. The assessment of achievement of the NRV shall be carried out according to the procedure described in section 3.2 and the NRV shall represent the maximum tolerable level of the risk to which it refers, without prejudice to the provisions on the range of tolerance laid down in point 3.2.3;

    (b)

    for each Member State and for each of the risk categories whose respective NRV is higher than the corresponding CST, the CST shall represent the maximum tolerable level of the risk to which it refers. The assessment of achievement of the CST shall be carried out in compliance with the requirements deriving from the impact assessment and, where applicable, the timetable for gradual implementation of the CST, according to Article 7(3) of Directive 2004/49/EC.

    3.1.2.

    For each Member State, and for each of the risk categories, the assessment of achievement of the NRV and CST shall be carried out annually by the Agency, taking into consideration the most recent four preceding reported years.

    3.1.3.

    No later than 31 March each year the Agency shall report to the Commission on the overall results of the assessment of achievement of NRVs and CSTs.

    3.1.4.

    Taking into account the provisions laid down in point 1.1.3, from 2012 onwards the assessment of achievement of the NRVs and CSTs shall be carried out annually by the Agency taking into consideration the most recent five preceding reported years.

    3.1.5.

    The outcome of the assessment of achievement referred to in point 3.1.1 shall be classified as follows:

    (a)

    acceptable safety performance;

    (b)

    possible deterioration of safety performance;

    (c)

    probable deterioration of safety performance.

    3.2.   Stepwise description of the procedure referred to in point 3.1.1(a)

    3.2.1.

    The procedure for the assessment of achievement of NRVs is composed of four different steps as described in the following points. The overall decisional flowchart of the procedure is shown in Appendix 2, where positive and negative decisional arrows correspond respectively to a ‘passed’ and a ‘failed’ result of the different assessment steps.

    3.2.2.

    The first assessment step shall verify whether the observed safety performance is complying with the NRV or not. The observed safety performance shall be measured by using the measurement units listed in Appendix 1 and the data referred to in section 1.1, with time series which shall include the most recent years of observations as specified in section 3.1. The observed safety performance shall be expressed in terms of:

    (a)

    safety performance observed in the single most recent reported year;

    (b)

    moving weighted average (MWA), as specified in section 3.3.

    The values returned by applying points (a) and (b) shall then be compared with the NRV, and if one of these values does not exceed the NRV the safety performance shall be considered acceptable. If this is not the case, the procedure shall continue with the second assessment step.

    3.2.3.

    The second assessment step shall consider the safety performance as acceptable if the MWA does not exceed the NRV plus a 20 % range of tolerance. If this condition is not satisfied, the Agency shall ask the safety authority of the Member State concerned to provide the specifics of the single highest-consequence accident (in terms of FWSIs) in the most recent years of observation as referred to in section 3.1, excluding the years used to set the NRV.

    If this single accident is more severe, in terms of consequences, than the most severe single accident included in the data used for setting the NRV, it shall be excluded from the statistics. The MWA is then recalculated to check whether it lies within the abovementioned range of tolerance. If this is the case, the safety performance shall be considered acceptable. If this is not the case, the procedure shall continue with the third assessment step.

    3.2.4.

    The third assessment step shall verify whether it is the first time in the last 3 years that the second assessment step did not return evidence of acceptable safety performance. If this is the case, the outcome of the third assessment step shall be classified as ‘passed’. The procedure shall continue with the fourth step, whatever the outcome of the third step may be.

    3.2.5.

    The fourth assessment step shall verify whether the number of significant accidents per train-km, with respect to the previous years, remained stable (or decreased). The criteria for this appraisal shall be whether there has been a statistically significant increase in the number of relevant significant accidents per train-km. This shall be evaluated by using an upper Poisson tolerance bound which will determine the acceptable variability based on the number of accidents that occurred in the different Member States.

    If the number of significant accidents per train-km does not exceed the abovementioned tolerance bound, it is assumed that there has not been a statistically significant increase, and the outcome of this assessment step shall be classified as ‘passed’.

    Depending on the risk category to which the different NRVs under assessment of achievement refer, the significant accidents to be considered for carrying out this assessment step are as follows:

    (a)

    risks to passengers: all relevant significant accidents;

    (b)

    risks to staff or employees, including the staff of contractors: all relevant significant accidents;

    (c)

    risks to level crossing users: all relevant significant accidents included in the category ‘accidents involving level crossings’;

    (d)

    risks to unauthorised persons on railway premises: all relevant significant accidents included in the category ‘accidents to persons caused by rolling stock in motion’;

    (e)

    risks to others: all relevant significant accidents;

    (f)

    risk to society as a whole: all significant accidents.

    3.3.   Moving weighted averaging process for the annual assessment of achievement of NRVs

    3.3.1.

    For each Member State and for each of the risk categories to which the Moving Weighted Averaging (MWA) is applied for carrying out, in each year Y (starting from Y = 2010 onwards), the assessment steps described in section 3.2, the following phases shall be applied for calculating the MWAY:

    (a)

    calculation of the annual observations OBS i returned by the corresponding indicators listed in Appendix 1, after providing as input the data available from the sources referred to in section 1.1 for the relevant years (the index i takes the values as defined in the formula below);

    (b)

    calculation of the arithmetic n-year average (AV) of annual observations OBSi [initially n = 4; from 2012 onwards n = 5];

    (c)

    calculation of the absolute value of the difference ABSDIFF i between each annual observation OBSi and the AV. If ABSDIFFi < 0,01 * AV, to ABSDIFFi is attributed a constant value equal to 0,01 * AV;

    (d)

    calculation of the weight Wi , by taking the inverse of ABSDIFFi ;

    (e)

    calculation of the MWAY as follows:

    Formula
    ;

    where i is a natural number and

    if Y = 2010 or 2011: x = Y – 5; N = Y – 2

    if Y ≥ 2012: x = Y – 6; N = Y – 2

    APPENDIX 1

    Measurement units for NRVs and CSTs

    Risk category

    Measurement units

    Scaling bases

    1.

    Passengers

    1.1

    Number of passenger FWSIs per year arising from significant accidents/Number of passenger train-km per year

    Passenger train-km per year

    1.2

    Number of passenger FWSIs per year arising from significant accidents/Number of passenger-km per year

    Passenger-km per year

    2.

    Employees

    Number of employee FWSIs per year arising from significant accidents/Number of train-km per year

    Train-km per year

    3.

    Level crossing users

    3.1

    Number of level-crossing user FWSIs per year arising from significant accidents/Number of train-km per year

    Train-km per year

    3.2

    Number of level-crossing user FWSIs per year arising from significant accidents/[(Number of Train-km per year * Number of level crossings)/Track-km)]

    (Train-km per year * Number of level crossings)/Track-km

    4.

    Others

    Yearly number of FWSIs to persons belonging to the category ‘others’ arising from significant accidents/Number of train-km per year

    Train-km per year

    5.

    Unauthorised persons on railway premises

    Number of FWSIs to unauthorised persons on railway premises per year arising from significant accidents/Number of train-km per year

    Train-km per year

    6.

    Whole society

    Total number of FWSIs per year arising from significant accidents/Number of train-km per year

    Train-km per year

    APPENDIX 2

    Decision flowchart for the procedure referred to in point 3.1.1(a) of the Annex

    Image 1

    FIRST STEP:

    Observed safety performance (most recent observation or MWA) complying with NRV?

    YES

    NO

    SECOND STEP:

    MWA ≤ NRV × 1,2?

    If not, repeat check with single event exclusion

    Acceptable safety performance

    Member State informed of the results and not required to take any specific action.

    YES

    NO

    THIRD STEP:

    Is this the first time in the last 3 years that the second step returned a negative result?

    YES

    NO

    FOURTH STEP:

    Did the number of significant accidents remain stable or decrease?

    FOURTH STEP:

    Did the number of significant accidents remain stable or decrease?

    YES

    NO

    YES

    NO

    Acceptable safety performance

    Member State informed of the results and not required to take any specific action.

    Possible deterioration of safety performance

    Member State informed of the results and required to analyse and comment on the performance.

    The Commission may require the Agency to give a technical opinion on the information provided by the Member State.

    Probable deterioration of safety performance

    Member State informed of the results and required to analyse and comment on the performance.

    Where necessary Member State has to submit a safety enhancement plan (SEP) to the Commission. The Agency may be asked to give a technical opinion on the SEP.


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