As the climate crisis become harder to ignore, many travellers are looking for more sustainable options, often eschewing aviation and travelling overland instead. Here, Lonely Planet takes a look at five popular European routes, comparing cost, journey time and emissions, to help you choose which method of transport is best.

1. London to Paris

Air travel between London and Paris has nosedived since the first Eurostar chugged under the Channel in 1994. The high-speed railway is a no-brainer for those travelling between the two capitals; once you factor in the airport rigmarole, the Eurostar works out quicker than the plane, with similar prices. The carbon saving makes the fuel-efficient rail service even more appealing.

Cost (one-way)

Plane: From around £23 with easyJet, excluding seat selection and hold luggage
Train: From £29 with Eurostar
Coach: From £11.99 with Flixbus

Journey time

Plane: 5 hours (allowing an hour each end to travel to and from the airport, plus 2 hours at the airport)
Train: 3 hours (including 45 minutes at the train station)
Coach: 8.5 hours (including 15 minutes at the coach station)

Emissions*

Plane: 54.4kg per passenger
Train: 2.1kg per passenger
Coach: 12.8kg per passenger (including Eurotunnel)

Verdict

A quarter of a century after it launched, Eurostar is still the fastest and most sustainable option between London and Paris.

The exterior of a  large ornate red-brick building, with a canal and a pedestrianised section in the foreground
Eurostar goes in to Centraal Station in Amsterdam. V_E / Shutterstock

2. London to Amsterdam

London to Amsterdam is one of the world’s busiest air routes, but Eurostar’s new service to the Dutch capital should change that. Calling at Rotterdam, the train takes around four hours, but currently only runs one way due to border complications. Those complications will be resolved in April this year, increasing interest in this already popular route. Providing further competition is Stenaline, which ferries passengers across the North Sea overnight and allows them to continue by train to any Dutch train station.

Cost (one-way)

Plane: From around £16 with easyJet, excluding seat selection and hold luggage
Train: From £35 with Eurostar
Coach: From £21 with BlaBlaBus
Ferry: From £83 (“rail and sail” fare, includes cabin)

Journey time

Plane: 4 hours 45 minutes
Train: 4 hours 40 minutes (return journey around 6 hours)
Coach: 11 hours
Ferry: 12 hours

Emissions

Plane: 56.6kg per passenger
Train: 3.3kg per passenger
Coach: 15.4kg (including Eurotunnel)
Ferry: 9kg (including train transfers)

Verdict

From April, when it runs direct both ways, the Eurostar will be a no-brainer for eco-conscious travellers; unless they want to take their bike, in which case the ferry prevails.

Thello French Train in the Central Station of Milan, Italy.
The Thello train travels from Paris to Milan and onwards to Venice. Eyesonmilan / Shutterstock

3. Paris to Milan

With Paris to Milan airfares costing roughly the same as a continental breakfast, the budget carriers are driving a hard bargain on this route. A sweetener for rail passengers is the stunning Alpine scenery that the TGV passes through, and the affordable sleeper service, Thello, which departs Paris every night and arrives in Milan the following morning, before continuing on to Venice. Travellers could also take the coach, but you’d need the patience of a saint to do that.

Cost (one-way)

Plane: From around £9 with Ryanair, excluding seat selection and hold luggage
Train: From £22 with Thello (sharing a 6-berth couchette)
Coach: From £16 with BlaBlaBus and Flixbus

Journey time

Plane: 5 hours 30 minutes
Train: 11 hours (Thello); 7 hours 30 minutes (TGV)
Coach: 13 hours

Emissions

Plane: 101.8kg per passenger
Train: 5.1kg per passenger
Coach: 23kg per passenger

Verdict

Though the plane is the quickest and cheapest option, the train compensates with scenery and CO2 savings.

Blurred people going by bike in Copenhagen, with Christiansborg palace on background.
Further reduce your carbon footprint by cycling in bike-friendly Copenhagen. william87 / Getty Images

4. Stockholm to Copenhagen

Rail enthusiasts often talk about the “magic five hours”, which is supposedly how long a train must take before travelling by plane is quicker. Clocking in at five hours (excluding station dwell time), the Stockholm to Copenhagen train is right on that limit and has the added benefit of a self-service buffet car. The train would have been the first service Greta Thunberg took on her overland odyssey to Davos in 2019 and is likely to do well out of the “flight shame” movement, which originated in Sweden.

Cost (one-way)

Plane: From around £38 with Norwegian, excluding seat selection and hold luggage
Train: From £20 with SJ
Coach: From £25 with Flixbus

Journey time

Plane: 5 hours 10 minutes
Train: 5 hours 30 minutes
Coach: 9 hours 30 minutes

Emissions

Plane: 86.6kg per passenger
Train: 3.9kg per passenger
Coach: 17.7kg per passenger

Verdict

In the home of flygskam, the Greta-endorsed train is the cheaper, more sustainable option.

Horizon at sunset with aeroplane.
Air travel is not the greenest option, but often it's the quickest and cheapest. D-Stocker / Shutterstock

5. Madrid to Lisbon

Airlines have an advantage on the Iberian Peninsula, where the two capitals are separated by some formidable scenery. Passengers wishing to travel overland can hop aboard Trenhotel Lusitania, a dated sleeper that runs on stretches of line that are reportedly yet to be electrified. Prices are low, though, and timings favourable; passengers can supper in Madrid and arrive in Lisbon as the first pastel de natas of the day come out the oven. For the really brave there’s an overnight coach.

Cost (one-way)

Plane: From around £24 with Air Europa, excluding seat selection and hold luggage
Train: From £29 with Trenhotel Lusitania (sharing a 6-berth couchette)
Coach: From £9 with Flixbus

Journey time

Plane: 5 hours 20 minutes
Train: 10 hours 30 minutes
Coach: 8 hours 30 minutes

Emissions

Plane: 80kg per passenger
Train: 28kg per passenger (parts of line not electrified)
Coach: 17kg per passenger

Verdict

It’s a committed environmentalist who does this route by rail or road, which work out slower but greener than the plane.

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*Calculations are approximations, based on data from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS). According to the BEIS, CO2 emissions per passenger per km are as follows: short-haul flights, 158g; coach, 27g; national rail (unelectrified), 41g; international rail (electrified), 6g; ferry (foot passengers), 19g.

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Cize, France - July 9, 2015: French high speed train TGV operated by SNCF, national rail operator on Cize-Bolozon viaduct bridge in Ain, Rhone-Alpes region in France. This train was developed during the 1970s by GEC-Alsthom and SNCF. A TGV test train set the record for the fastest wheeled train, reaching 574.8 km/h (357.2 mph) on 3 April 2007. Viaduct of Cize-Bolozon in summer season in Bugey along Ain river. This viaduct is a combination rail and vehicular viaduct crossing the Ain gorge. An original span built in the same location in 1875 was destroyed in World War II. Reconstructed as an urgent post-war project due to its position on a main line to Paris, the new viaduct reopened in May 1950. It carries road and rail traffic at different levels.
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