Skip to main content

More EU money for Fehmarn Belt Link

The money underlines the importance of the 17.6km Fehmarnbelt tunnel project for the entire European road network.
By David Arminas July 4, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
The tunnel will consist of 79 standard 217m-long elements around 10m high with two highway tubes, one emergency tube and two rail tubes (image courtesy of Femern)

The European Union has allocated €537.53 million (US$567.35 million) to the Fehmarn Belt Link in Denmark up to 2027, according to Denmark’s ministry of transport. The time

The Fehmarn Belt is a strait between the German island of Fehmarn and the Danish island of Lolland. The money underlines the importance of the 17.6km Fehmarnbelt tunnel project not only for the Danish road network but the entire European transport network, said Trine Bramsen, minister of transport.

When finished it will be the longest ever constructed, surpassing the 13.5km Marmaray Tunnel of the Bosphorus in Turkey. It will consist of 79 standard 217m-long elements around 10m high with two highway tubes, one emergency tube and two rail tubes.

There will be 10 service elements, each 85.7m-long but both wider and higher and with a subfloor to house technical and servicing equipment. The deepest section of the Fehmarn Belt Trench, into which the tunnel elements will be laid, will be 35m.

The tunnel will replace a ferry service from Rødby and Puttgarden. The project’s approval process had been bogged down over environmental issues, especially within the German state of Schleswig-Holstein in which the southern end of 18km immersed tunnel will surface.

Danish company Femern is responsible for construction of the link. A tunnel element fabrication yard and a works harbour has been built in Rødbyhavn, as well as a tunnel portal on Lolland.

Work is progressing at a cement facility at the Rødbyhavn construction site on the Danish island of Lolland. When finished, the factory will produce concrete undersea tunnel elements for the project.

The Lolland factory will cast all 89 of the project’s 217m-long concrete tunnel segments with each segments weighing more than 73,000 tonnes. The halls of the factory will have strict climate control, ensuring the segments harden evenly.

The first of the six production lines is expected to be ready by the end of the year, with the first segments expected to be towed by barge to their respective immersion points next year.

The road and rail tunnel’s developer is Femern A/S, while the main contractor on the €10 billion project is Fehmarn Link Contractors JV.

In June last year, SBM Mineral Processing was awarded the biggest contract in the company’s history – to supply six concrete mixing plants that will produce around 3 million cubic metres of concrete.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Danish-German Fehmarn Belt road and rail tunnel hits funding snag
    July 9, 2015
    A Danish newspaper has learned of a significant European Union funding gap for one of Europe’s most ambitious transportation road and rail projects. The Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link would connect the German island of Fehmarn with the Danish island of Lolland. A submersed tunnel will cross the 18km-wide Fehmarn Belt, or Fehmarn Strait, in the Baltic Sea. Last February news emerged that contractors had revamped their cost estimates, adding nearly €1.2 billion to the project. This put the final cost of the 18
  • Fehmarnbelt hearings to start
    September 24, 2020
    The Danish-German project has come under financial and environmental criticism.
  • New study suggests Fehmarn Belt payback close to 50 years
    October 9, 2015
    A study by Danish consultant Hans Schjær-Jacobsen has shown that the payback period for the proposed Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link tunnel project between Denmark and Germany will be close to 50 years. This is a decade longer than estimated by the developers of the project which focusses on a 17km immersed tunnel, the study noted. The Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link will connect the German island of Fehmarn with the Danish island of Lolland. The 17km tunnel, including two railway tunnels, two motorway tunnels and an
  • Denmark reconsiders a Kattegat link
    May 10, 2023
    A bridge would cross the Kattegat Strait between the Jutland peninsula city of Aarhus - Denmark’s second largest city after the capital Copenhagen - and Kalundborg, a small city of 17,000 on the western shore of Zealand Island.