In an increasingly interconnected Europe, the logistics and transport sector is the lifeblood of the economy. Millions of trucks, vans, and company cars cross borders daily, delivering goods and services that fuel modern life. A critical, yet often invisible, tool for these operations is the tankpas (fuel card). Currently, the market is fragmented: a Dutch haulier might need separate cards for different countries, oil brands, or service networks (e.g., Shell, TotalEnergies, BP, or independent stations). The concept of a “universele tankpas” – a single, universally accepted fuel card valid at any refueling point across the continent – presents a compelling, albeit complex, vision. This essay argues that while a universal fuel card offers profound benefits in efficiency, cost control, and sustainability, its realization faces significant hurdles in standardization, commercial competition, and technological integration.
The Universal Fuel Card: A Vision for a Seamless European Transport Future universele tankpas
Finally, there are concerns over liability and regulation. Who holds the risk if a single universal system is hacked, leading to massive fuel theft? How would value-added tax (VAT) and fuel excise duties, which vary wildly between EU member states, be automatically calculated and settled? Without a harmonized fiscal framework, a universal card would face a regulatory patchwork that currently makes cross-border fuel transactions a complex accounting task. In an increasingly interconnected Europe, the logistics and
Despite its allure, the universal fuel card faces formidable obstacles. The first is commercial competition. Fuel card issuers (like DKV, UTA, or Eurowag) and oil companies have built profitable businesses on exclusive networks and proprietary data. They have little incentive to agree to a universal standard that would commoditize their service and erode their brand loyalty. Second, there is the technical challenge of universal acceptance. Retrofitting every gas pump in Europe—from modern highway stations to rural, unattended pumps—with a single, interoperable authentication system (likely based on open banking or a dedicated digital ID) would be a multi-billion euro undertaking. Currently, the market is fragmented: a Dutch haulier
Perhaps the most forward-looking benefit of a universal card is its potential to accelerate the shift to sustainable transport. As the fleet diversifies to include electric, hydrogen, and biofuel vehicles, the current fragmented card system struggles to keep up. A universal card could be designed from the ground up to handle multiple energy types: authorizing a kWh charge at a truck stop, releasing hydrogen at a dedicated pump, or tracking the purchase of HVO100 (hydrotreated vegetable oil). By creating a single payment and data standard for all green energy sources, a universal card would remove a key barrier for companies hesitant to invest in multi-energy fleets.