Home » today » News » Traffic Disruptions at RATP and SNCF with Impacts on RER B

Traffic Disruptions at RATP and SNCF with Impacts on RER B

Traffic at RATP and SNCF will be further disrupted this Thursday. The RER B will be particularly impacted. On the other hand, the RER A, buses and trams will run normally. Find traffic information line by line.

Following the third day of the strike against the pension reform, the RATP expects reduced traffic on Thursday March 9, even if it is an improvement compared to the day of March 8.

Here is the traffic info line by line.

  • M1: normal traffic
  • M2: almost normal traffic in the morning, 2 trains out of 3 in the afternoon
  • M3: 1 train out of 2 in the morning, 1 train out of 3 in the afternoon
  • M3Bis : normal traffic
  • M4: traffic normal
  • M5: normal traffic in the morning, 3 trains out of 4 in the afternoon
  • M6: 3 trains out of 4 in the morning, 2 trains out of 3 in the afternoon
  • M7: 2 out of 3 trains
  • M7bis : normal traffic
  • M8: 1 in 3 trains
  • M9 : almost normal traffic
  • M10: 1 out of 2 trains
  • M11: almost normal traffic in the morning, 2 trains out of 3 in the afternoon.
    Due to work related to the extension, the line will be closed at 10 p.m.
  • M12 : almost normal traffic in the morning, 2 trains out of 3 in the afternoon
  • M13: 1 train out of 2 between 6 a.m. – 8 p.m.
  • M14 : trafic normal

RER A: On average 3 trains out of 4. Interconnection maintained at Nanterre Prefecture

RER B: On average 1 train out of 2 at peak times and 2 trains out of 3 at off-peak times. Interconnection interrupted at Gare du Nord.

RER C: 1 train out of 3

RER D: 1 train out of 3

RER E: 1 in 2 trains

Transilien J, K, L and P: 1 out of 2 trains
Transilien N: 1 train out of 3

Traffic will be normal on the entire bus and tram network. The Orlyval will not be affected by the strike movement.

According to the RATP, traffic should improve on Friday March 10, but some metro lines and RER B will still be affected by the strike action.

More info on Ratp.fr or the Bonjour RATP application

France’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGAC) on Wednesday demanded that airlines give up 20-30% of their flights on Thursday and Friday, like the previous two days, due to the strike by opposing air traffic controllers. pension reform. Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle airport will have 20% fewer flights and 30% at Paris-Orly.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.