Skip to main content

PPP for Danish highway

Construction of the first public-private (PPP) funded highway in Denmark will see a new road in the south of the country near the German border. The Kliplev Motorway Group (KMG) is one half of Denmark's first ever PPP with the government, after winning the tender to build the highway. KMG is financing the whole project and the deal includes construction and ongoing maintenance when it is complete. KMG is the concessionary company for the project and is 100% owned by the Austrian company STRABAG, Europe's la
February 7, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
The low emission and low fuel consumption of the Volvo CE machines has proven useful on this Danish site
Construction of the first public-private (PPP) funded highway in Denmark will see a new road in the south of the country near the German border.

The 2352 Kliplev Motorway Group (KMG) is one half of Denmark's first ever PPP with the government, after winning the tender to build the highway. KMG is financing the whole project and the deal includes construction and ongoing maintenance when it is complete.

KMG is the concessionary company for the project and is 100% owned by the Austrian company 945 Strabag, Europe's largest construction company.

The e126 million, two-year project, is a new way of working in Denmark. However, KMG won the deal by promising to complete the highway by spring 2012, without payment until the work is completed.

The highway will stretch from Kliplev in the south-west to Sønderborg in the south-east, and will connect Sønderborg to major roads such as the E45, which runs the length of the country.

It is building the whole highway at once using a workforce of 350 as well as 200 machines, of which 71 are 2394 Volvo CE units supplied by North German dealer 2353 Baumaschinen Koenicke. The Volvo CE fleet includes 30 Volvo A25E and A35E articulated haulers, 40 EC210 up to EC460 excavators and several L220F wheel loaders.

Fuel use and exhaust emissions are a top priority for KMG and it is believed to be the only highway construction project in Europe to have a CO? balance sheet to monitor diesel consumption. This is updated several times/year and sent to the Danish authorities.

KMG is limiting the amount of fuel needed in site transportation by mixing soil with concrete and chalk in-situ, as a base for the highway. KMG is also using the railway to transport cement and chalk from Hannover in Germany to Padborg in Denmark, which is helping speed construction. From there, materials are driven by truck to the site. Some 120,000tonnes of lime and cement are being moved at a rate of 700/800tonnes/day.

The service set-up includes a washing bay which has never been done before in Denmark. This washes soil from the machines and then separates oil and soil from the water so the water can be re-used to wash the next machine.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Latest earthmoving machines noticeably quieter
    February 20, 2012
    One of the most strikingly apparent features of the new Tier 4 Interim/Stage IIIB rated construction machines is the noise, or rather the lack of it. With engines running at usual operating speed, these emissions compliant machines are noticeably quieter.
  • Volvo's next generation
    February 15, 2012
    New products from Volvo Construction Equipment are emission-compliant as a matter of course, says the company, which will introduce next generation articulated haulers (ADTs), wheeled loaders, excavators and backhoe loaders. From the six-strong F-Series articulated haulers (starting with the A25F with a load capacity of 24tonnes to the A40F FS with 39tonnes) will be the 28tonne capacity A30F and the A40F.
  • Dutch team wins Volvo contest
    February 27, 2012
    A team from the Netherlands has secured a hard-won victory in Volvo Construction Equipment's gruelling Masters Final held in Eskilstuna, Sweden. Five teams from across the world took part in the final, which recognises teams of parts and service technicians from across Volvo Construction Equipment's global network. The winning team, from the dealer Kuiken in the Netherlands, comprised Gido Bennink, Frans van Boxmeer, Jos Houben and was lead by Harco Christiaens.
  • Volvo machines facilitate German highway construction project
    August 15, 2014
    German contractor Gebrüder Bantle is working on a large ring road project in Bösingen, excavating and building 6km of highway and nine bridges. The region’s main road, the B462, provides an important link between the A5 Rheintalautobahn and A81 Stuttgart highways. The B462 carries some 12,000 vehicles/day and suffers congestion at peak periods, so a new ring road will help reduce delays for commuters. The Dunningen project consists of a 6.4km ring road, nine bridges and several access roads. Gebrüder Bantle