Skip to main content

Go-ahead for controversial highway

APPROVAL HAS now been given for work to go ahead on a key section of Slovakia’s D1 highway. The work had been delayed as the European Commission (EC) was concerned over environmental issues facing sections of the route that passed through a nature reserve. The EC has now given its approval for construction of the highway between Martin and Presov on conditional terms. The EC says that the sections in zones belonging to the Natura 2000 network can be built once terms are agreed with the Slovak government o
May 30, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
APPROVAL HAS now been given for work to go ahead on a key section of Slovakia’s D1 highway.

The work had been delayed as the 2465 European Commission (EC) was concerned over environmental issues facing sections of the  route that passed through a nature reserve. The EC has now given its approval for construction of the highway between Martin and Presov on conditional terms.

The EC says that the sections in zones belonging to the Natura 2000 network can be  built once terms are agreed with the Slovak government on compensations for environmental damage. This decision means that construction works can now start between Poprad and Presov and most parts of the Martin-Ruzomberok section. The approval allows the 1054 European Investment Bank (EIB) to provide a €1 billion loan for the project.

The highway will be built by the consortium  of 2877 Doprastav and Vahostav as a public-private partnership (PPP) under a 30-year concession deal.

The eastern part of the 75km road is expected to open in 2012 and the Martin-Ruzomberok section in 2013.

Although the EIB approved the whole loan, the EC approval is only for certain sections and any works affecting zones which are part of the Natura 2000 network must be postponed until the EC says that the project complies with EU  regulations. The controversial sections include a peatland close to the Natura 2000 zone and pillars in the Vah River which could affect the local environment.

The 2875 Slovakia’s Ministry of Transport says that  99% of problems related to the Turany-Hubovy section have been already resolved, although Priatelia Zeme-CEPA, the Slovak branch of the  Friends of the Earth, and other environmentalist groups claim that construction of the D1  motorway in the Turany-Hubova section cannot comply with the EU Biotop Protection Directive.

Related Content

  • Slovakia tunnel sections underway but some delays
    January 23, 2018
    The route for new tunnel links for Slovakia’s D1 highway has been agreed. New tunnels now look set to be built on the 13.5km stretch between Turany and Hubova section of the D1 highway. This plan calls for the construction of the Korbelka and Havran tunnels at an estimated cost of €900 million. Building these two links would bypass the Lower Fatra mountain range, with the Korbelka Tunnel measuring 5.9km and the Havran Tunnel measuring 2.9km long. The Slovak Environment Ministry rejected an appeal against th
  • Funding doubts over major highway project
    May 15, 2012
    Slovakia’s troubled D1 highway project continues to be a topic of controversy in the country, with doubts over whether there are sufficient funds to pay for the completion of the route. A political debate focuses on whether the Transport Ministry should have extended the deadline for the agreement of the financial package for the first tranche of contracts for the highway. The Slovenske Dialnice consortium recently met with the Transport Ministry over the decision not to continue with the PPP project to c
  • Slovakia's D1 highway moving ahead
    March 1, 2012
    Slovakia's Transport Ministry has been working with highway firm NDS on a highway construction programme for the 2011-2014 period.
  • Important road works for Slovakia
    July 6, 2023
    Important road connection works are underway for Slovakia.