Skip to main content

Danish-German Fehmarn Belt road and rail tunnel hits funding snag

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
July 9, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
A Danish newspaper has learned of a significant 1116 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 18km tunnel including two railway tunnels, two motorway tunnels and an emergency tunnel, at just under €7.4 billion.

Business daily Dagbladet Borsen has now reported that the EU has given the project €590 million, far less than the €1 billion or so the Danes had expected and leaves a budget hole of more than €402 million.

However, Denmark’s former transport minister, Magnus Heunicke, said he hoped more money would be coming from the EU later on for the project that is expected to be open by 2024.

Borsen also reported that Denmark has another opportunity to apply for EU funds during the next application round in 2018, although no level of funding is guaranteed beforehand.

The new transport minister Hans Christian Schmidt will be under pressure to prepare for the new round, Borsen reported.

In April, the Danish parliament approved the Construction Act for the Danish section of the link which authorises construction of the tunnel. The act also authorises state-owned companies 4782 Femern A/S and Femern A/S Landanlaeg to construct and operate the link.

But work cannot start until the German federal government has completed a review of the overall economics of the project, which due to be completed by the autumn. The German state of Schleswig-Holstein has yet to grant formal construction approval.

Fehmarn Island is already connected by bridge to the German mainland and Lolland is already connected by a tunnel and bridges to Zealand over the island Falster.

Zealand is the most populated island in Denmark with a population just under 2.5 million, representing about 45% of the country's population.

The project would cut around 160km off the driving distance between the Danish capital Copenhagen and the major northern German port of Hamburg. Driving time between Copenhagen and Hamburg would be down to around 2.4 hours versus the more than four hours now.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Denmark fixed link project proposed
    March 18, 2022
    A new fixed link project is proposed to span Denmark’s Kattegat strait.
  • Cost of Denmark-German link
    February 20, 2012
    Discussions on a new link between Denmark and Germany continue with Denmark's Transport Ministry publishing data showing that the proposed bridge option would be more costly than a tunnel.
  • VIDEO: Companies pre-qualify for Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link consulting
    November 3, 2016
    4782 Femern, the company charged with building what will be the world’s longest submerged tunnel, has prequalified companies for consulting work.

    The companies will be able to tender for two framework agreements, one for client consulting services and the other for technical in-house consulting services.

    Femern is responsible for building the 18km Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link immersed tunnel between Rødbyhavn in Denmark and Puttgarden in Germany. The estimated cost has increased over the past several years to reach around €7.4 billion.
  • Storstrom Bridge to be Denmark’s third longest
    March 8, 2018
    Form and functionality come together in Denmark’s latest Storstrom Bridge design. David Arminas reports. An Italian joint venture recently won the construction contract for what will be one of Denmark’s longest bridges, the replacement 4km-long road and rail Storstrom Bridge. The Danish Road Directorate - Vejdirektoratet - awarded the work to a joint venture of Condotte and Grandi Lavori Fincosit along with bridge design consultant Seteco Ingegneria as a subcontractor. Estimated cost is around €550 milli