Skip to main content

EU launches investigation into Fehmarn Belt financing model

The European Commission said it will investigate the public financing for the Fehmarn Belt link to see if it in line with state aid rules. The announcement follows the European Union General Court's annulment of a previous Commission decision approving the support. "Today's opening of such an investigation is an invitation for all stakeholders to provide their input, which will allow the Commission to adopt a new, well-informed final decision,” said Margrethe Vestager, EU Competition Commissioner.
June 21, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

The 2465 European Commission said it will investigate the public financing for the Fehmarn Belt link to see if it in line with state aid rules.

The announcement follows the 1116 European Union General Court's annulment of a previous Commission decision approving the support.

"Today's opening of such an investigation is an invitation for all stakeholders to provide their input, which will allow the Commission to adopt a new, well-informed final decision,” said Margrethe Vestager, EU Competition Commissioner.

This financing model is likely to see European Union support of just under €421 million for the project which has an overall cost of around the €8.7 billion.

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. Construction of the Fehmarn Belt Fixed Link between Denmark and Germany should start this autumn for completion in 2028, according to the 1035 Danish government.

Danish company 4782 Femern, which is responsible for the construction of the link, will begin negotiations with two contractor consortiums for the first of the project’s works which will start on the Danish side. A tunnel element fabrication yard and a works harbour must be built in Rødbyhavn, as well as a tunnel portal on Lolland.

The fixed immersed tunnel 18km link across the Fehmarnbelt will carry a four-lane motorway alongside a twin track-electrified railway. It will be more than five times the length of the tunnel under Øresund linking Denmark and Sweden and more than three times the length of the record-holding Trans-Bay Tube Bart Tunnel in San Francisco in the 972 US state of California.

Vehicle passage through the tunnel at 110kph is expected to take around 10 minutes. Duration of the train journey between Hamburg in northern Germany and the Danish capital  Copenhagen will be cut from about four and a half hours to three, according to engineering consultant 6801 Ramboll which is collaborating with 8624 Tunnel Engineering Consultants (TEC) og 1419 Arup. 6801 Ramboll is advising Fehmarn on the design of the immersed tunnel solution.

Project information is available on the project’s official website, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external www.femern.com false https://femern.com/en false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Turkmenistan starts construction of Ashgabat-Turkmenbashi road
    May 8, 2015
    Turkmenistan has started construction of the 544km Ashgabat-Turkmenbashi highway under a public-private partnership contract. The deal is expected to cost between US$800-900 million for every 2km or so of road construction from Ashgabat in central Turkmenistan to Turkmenbashi, a city of around 90,000 on the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea. For a YouTube video graphic representation of the highway, click here. To see World Highways report onTurkmenistan’s highways projects in 2011, click here. Türkmenb
  • McKinsey to present major construction sector report at bauma
    March 3, 2016
    Consultancy McKinsey and Company will launch its report Perspectives on the Construction Equipment Industry in Europe during the upcoming bauma exhibition in Munich. The report will be presented at joint seminar with the CECE – Committee for European Construction Equipment – in the bauma fairgrounds on April 13 when leading McKinsey analysts and CECE officials discuss main trends and challenges facing manufactures and buyers of equipment.
  • Five things road construction crews should not do
    June 19, 2015
    Sometimes you need a sense of humour to complete a task. Sometimes that sense of humour can overstep the mark and not everyone will see the joke, as these five road construction site pictures show. Here are five things that construction crews should not do.
  • ERF welcomes European Commission’s consultation on charging for the use of infrastructure
    January 2, 2013
    That roads are essential for Europe’s prosperity is something no policymaker in their right mind would deny Roads have a major impact on our daily lives, as it is one of the primary means of access to employment, services, and social activities. Moreover, by linking people and other modes of transport, they are a sine qua non for achieving greater cohesion within Europe. In light of this, it is somehow hard to believe how long it has taken policymakers to wake up to an inconvenient truth. This is that chr