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Wednesday, 14 November 2007, 13:29 GMT

Eurostar arrives in Paris on time

Eurostar train The first Eurostar service to leave St Pancras international station in London has arrived in Paris on time.

The high-speed train left the restored £800m station as scheduled at 1103 GMT on Wednesday.

It arrived in Paris just over two hours later at 1317 GMT via the newly completed £5.8bn Channel Tunnel rail link, now known as High Speed 1.

Protesters who are against the station's re-development demonstrated as the service pulled out.

One group representing residents who live nearby claim London's poor are being "squeezed out" of the area.

"Our move to St Pancras makes Eurostar even more accessible to travellers across Britain"
Richard Brown, Eurostar chief executive

Architect joins old to new

Why St Pancras was chosen

In graphics: St Pancras

The London Cycling Campaign has also complained the access to the station for bicycles is sub-standard.

And Greenpeace unfurled a banner on the front of St Pancras which supported the rail link but urged Prime Minister Gordon Brown not to expand Heathrow airport.

The first departures from St Pancras coincided with the start of an open-ended strike by French rail unions in protest at President Nicolas Sarkozy's planned pension reforms.

But Eurostar was confident it would not impact on services.

Eurostar chief executive Richard Brown and Friends of the Earth executive director Tony Juniper named the first train Tread Lightly - after a Eurostar environmental campaign began earlier this year.

The company has set a target of reducing its carbon dioxide emissions by 25% per passenger journey by 2012.

Mr Brown said: "Today marks a new dawn for short-haul travel in Europe.

"Our move to St Pancras makes Eurostar even more accessible to travellers across Britain.

RAIL DESTINATIONS
Fastest travel times

Compare more times below
Map of UK and Europe showing train destinations "We will carry passengers with greater speed, ease and reliability than ever before, and our travellers will have the extra reassurance of knowing that they are making far less environmental impact compared with flying."

The first commercial passenger train for Brussels departed six minutes before the first arrival from the same city pulled into St Pancras, at 1109 GMT.

Work on the station began in 2001 to enable it to accommodate Eurostar trains as well as East Midlands Trains services, Thameslink and high-speed commuter services to Kent, due to start in 2009.

The new route will cut journey times to Paris by 20 minutes to two hours and 15 minutes, and to Brussels by 25 minutes to one hour and 51 minutes.

The last Eurostar train left London Waterloo at 1812 GMT on Tuesday.

Graph showing rail travel times Return to top



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Related to this story:
Final call for Waterloo Eurostar (13 Nov 07 |  London )
Waterloo sunset (12 Nov 07 |  Magazine )
French unions strike over reforms (13 Nov 07 |  Europe )
Queen opens new £800m St Pancras (06 Nov 07 |  London )
In Pictures: All change for Eurostar (14 Nov 07 |  In Pictures )

RELATED INTERNET LINKS
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St Pancras International
Friends of the Earth
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