Skip to main content

Tunnel inspections reveal safety compliance need

Results show the state of Europe's tunnel infrastructure at its 'most sublime and most depressing quality' as Patrick Smith reports. EuroTAP [European Tunnel Assessment Programme] 2010 has unveiled the results of inspections conducted earlier this year in 26 major tunnels in 13 European countries. The on site inspections, carried out between 12 April and 20 May, 2010, are said to indicate that an "alarming number of operational tunnels across Europe will not be ready to comply with EU tunnel safety rules wh
May 9, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
The double-deck Duplex A86 tunnel near Paris, opened in 2009, gained a glowing report. (EuroTAP, Jan Potente, photographer)

Results show the state of Europe's tunnel infrastructure at its 'most sublime and most depressing quality' as Patrick Smith reports.

2436 EuroTAP [European Tunnel Assessment Programme] 2010 has unveiled the results of inspections conducted earlier this year in 26 major tunnels in 13 European countries. The on site inspections, carried out between 12 April and 20 May, 2010, are said to indicate that an "alarming number of operational tunnels across Europe will not be ready to comply with EU tunnel safety rules when they come into effect in 2014." Of the tunnels (four in Spain, three in Germany, Italy, Austria and Switzerland, two in France and Norway, one in Belgium, Croatia, the Netherlands, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, and for the first time in the history of EuroTAP, in Iceland), overall one was rated as poor, three as very poor, two as acceptable, four as good and 16 tunnels scored very good.

The EU Tunnel Directive setting the minimum safety requirements for tunnels in the trans-European road networks was adopted in 2004.

EuroTAP says that despite significant progress made by many tunnel operators, practically 40% of tunnels tested in EuroTAP 2010 did not score top marks.

"We can see indications that some Member States will have an obvious problem to comply with the deadlines set by the EU Tunnel Directive by 2014 and 2019 respectively," said Wil Botman, director general of the FIA [7115 Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile, the organisation of the world's leading motoring organisations] European Bureau. "It is necessary to speed up the process of refurbishment of tunnels already in operation in order to meet requirements of the Directive and to improve the safety of all motorists." EuroTAP claims that inadequate breathing equipment for fire fighters, a major shortcoming in half of all tunnels would make rescues in thick smoke impossible. Similarly, the frequently noted lack of tunnel loudspeakers makes warnings about accidents to drivers entering or already in the tunnel impossible. Missing hydrants and information displays at portals, no barriers to close the tunnel, dark tunnel walls and insufficient escape route signs were among the most common deficiencies, while 19% of tunnels lack appropriate lighting and in-tunnel traffic radio reception, conditions all motorists expect to function.

With motorisation across Europe expected to increase and not just in peak holiday periods, roads and tunnels will have to bear increasing daily volumes of vehicles and increased risks of accidents.

"This year's results show the state of Europe's tunnel infrastructure at its most sublime and most depressing quality. In last place out of the 26 tested tunnels is Iceland's [sub-sea] Hvalfjörður Tunnel. For this EU candidate country, EuroTAP can serve as a benchmark in its efforts to become an EU member and comply with EU legislation," says EuroTAP.

The Hvalfjördur Tunnel, on the south-west coast of Iceland, opened in 1998, reduced the travel distance between the capital Reykjavík and other localities by over 40km.

Plans for the future include (2010) improved markings for lay-bys; additional fire extinguishers and batteries for the uninterruptible power supply system to be supplemented/replaced. Next year additional video cameras and transmission via optical fibres; additional emergency phones with fire extinguishers and improved markings are planned, while in 2012 escape route signs in the tunnel and new cabling for evacuation lighting will be fitted.

Between 2012 and 2014 the installation of an automatic video surveillance system; an automatic extinguishing system in the transformer stations and certified cables for power supply and control are scheduled.

With traffic in the tunnel increasing by approximately 10-12%/year 2004-2007, it was felt a new tunnel was necessary in 2014-2015 but following the financial crisis in 2008, there has been no growth in traffic.

"All geological research and primary design for the new tunnel was ready in July, 2008 but now it is not on the plan in the public sector for the next 8-10 years," said Gylfi Thordarson, managing director of the tunnel operators Spölur ehf.

At the other end of the test results scale stands the state-of-the-art A86 Duplex Tunnel, part of a ring road around Paris. This exemplary and innovative double-deck tunnel with cross-connections and additional escape and rescue routes every 200m, offers the full range of safety features that other operators should target.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • How retroreflection can assist in improving traffic safety
    April 29, 2015
    Better road markings can boost safety for road users. There is currently a strong focus on traffic safety in Europe with a number of programmes intended to reduce the overall number of crashes on roads and cut the statistics for injuries and fatalities. In the first EU programme implemented between 2001 and 2010, the goal was to halve the number of people killed in road crashes. Most EU countries showed significant improvement over the decade and a few countries met or even exceeded this target of 50% r
  • Hanwha on the Pedemontana Veneta
    November 1, 2022
    The need for a motorway to link the cities of Vicenza and Treviso in northern Italy emerged in the 1970s as the Venetian countryside became increasingly urbanised. Meanwhile, the enlargement of the European Union to the east in the 1990s also brought more traffic across the region
  • EU governments make surplus from road taxes, a FIA study finds
    November 9, 2016
    European Union governments took in €286.3 billion in road taxes during 2013 but re-invested only €178 billion back into highways, according to a new study.
  • Europe’s drive for safer roads sets new targets
    January 9, 2019
    Europe’s drive for improved road safety will see new targets being set. Previous ambitious plans to reduce road casualty rates have not been achieved, so new strategies are being devised. The European Transport Safety Commission (ETSC) is setting out its latest plans. In 2010, the European Union renewed its commitment to improve road safety by setting a target of reducing road deaths by 50% by 2020, compared to 2010 levels. This target followed an earlier target set in 2001 to halve road deaths by 2010. A n