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PLANNING FOR A SUSTAINABLE EUROPE? - TU Berlin

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259<br />

Regardless of these different modal biases, joint ERT lobbying for the missing<br />

links was heavily stepped up before the passing of the Maastricht Treaty, with three more<br />

ERT publications further underlining previous calls for Trans-European networks.<br />

Lobbying proved successful. Already two years after the ERT proposal, the European<br />

Conference of Ministers of Transport published its sketch-like map of Europe showing a<br />

list of “missing links” in European road and rail infrastructure (figure 6.8).<br />

Figure 6.8 Missing Links III: The ECMT Version<br />

Source: ECMT as reprinted in Turro (1999)<br />

Around the time of the Maastricht Treaty, the OECD (OECD 1992:93) also<br />

chimed in with efficiency arguments for completing key infrastructure links, linking the<br />

“missing links” rhetoric with the follow-up storyline of “bottlenecks” but interestingly<br />

also warning that it is also possible to create too much infrastructure:

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