Skip to main content

Electrical tender launched for Fehmarn tunnel

The winner must set up a renewable energy centre for its work.
By David Arminas February 10, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Installation will include power for an electrified railway that will run between beside the two the traffic lanes (image courtesy Femern A/S)

A tender has been launched for electrical installation within the planned €7 billion, 18km Fehmarnbelt immersed road-rail tunnel between Germany and Denmark.

As part of what will be a contract worth around €750 million (US$913 million), the winner must set up a renewable energy centre for its work. The tender will close and a decision made by the end of the year, work to start in 2022 or 2023.

Installation will include power for an electrified railway  that will run between beside the two the traffic lanes, ventilation, lighting, safety-emergency-monitoring systems, emergency doors, fire extinguishing systems, drainage, cable-pipe and various control systems.

The Fehmarn Belt is a strait between the German island of Fehmarn and the Danish island of Lolland. The tunnel will replace a ferry service from Rødby and Puttgarden. The project’s approval process was bogged down over environmental issues, especially within the German state of Schleswig-Holstein in which the southern end of 18km immersed tunnel will surface

Meanwhile, Femern Link Contractors started dredging and filling work last month for a works harbour in Rødbyhavn, as well as a tunnel portal on Lolland. A video of the dredging and earthworks is available here.

A Rambøll-Arup-TEC consultancy joint venture is engaged in a client consultancy services contract with Femern. The joint venture has also worked on other landmark infrastructure projects, including the Øresund Tunnel in Denmark, the City Tunnel in Malmö, Sweden, the Medway Tunnel in England, as well as underground rail systems in Amsterdam and Copenhagen.

COWI is carrying out the detailed design of the tunnel (north tunnel section, south tunnel section, and ramps & portals). Meanwhile, SWECO is handling the design for the dredging and reclamation work.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Contracts are about to be signed for the Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link
    March 13, 2015
    Nearly eight years after Denmark and Germany agreed to construct a major undersea road and rail tunnel, the first contracts are about to be signed. David Arminas reports. Construction is due to start later this year on one of Europe’s most ambitious, as well as the world’s longest, road and rail tunnels, the 17.6km Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link between Germany and Denmark. Fehmarnbelt is expected to cost around US$7.5 billion and be five times the length of the Øresund tunnel between the Danish capital Copenhagen
  • Zealand to gain from Fehmarn Belt tunnel
    July 2, 2021
    The number of commuters crossing the Fehmarn Belt, a Baltic Sea strait that separates a German island and a Danish island, could reach 1.2 million by 2030, notes a new report.
  • Femern to tender for Fehmarnbelt rail works
    January 16, 2023
    The contract will comprise a 25km two-track railway to run trains at 200kph and a catenary system of which 18km will be inside the immersed road-rail Fehmarnbelt Tunnel.
  • The Fehmarnbelt Tunnel, another Danish connection
    June 20, 2017
    The Fehmarnbelt Tunnel between Denmark and Germany is both ambitious and innovative, explains Susanne Kalmar Pedersen, project director at design engineering firm Ramboll, adviser to the client Fehmarn A/S. The ambitious Fehmarnbelt Tunnel - one of Europe’s largest ongoing infrastructure projects - is a priority project within the EU’s Trans European Network (TEN-T) programme. It will link the German island of Fehmarn with the Danish island of Lolland. The tunnel is an 18km immersed combined road and rail l