Skip to main content

Fehmarnbelt hearings to start

The Danish-German project has come under financial and environmental criticism.
By David Arminas September 24, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
A four-lane motorway and double-track electric railway tunnel will run under the Baltic Sea strait

A German court will soon open proceedings in seven lawsuits against the planned rail and road link between the German island of Fehmarn and Denmark.

A four-lane motorway and double-track electric railway tunnel will run under the Fehmahrnbelt strait and the Danish government is shouldering the estimated €7.4 billion (US$8.54 billion) construction cost. The cases have been brought by environmental organisations, a farmer, communal authorities and two ferry operators whose services the project likely make redundant.

The ambitious project has run into repeated financial and environmental criticism since it was agreed several years ago by the two national governments to get the project underway. It will allow trains to cross the strait in just seven minutes and take cars ten minutes respectively. Currently, a ferry takes about an hour to make the crossing.

The Fehmarnbelt link will be built as an immersed tunnel. Hollow 73,000-tonne concrete elements, cast on land, will be barged out to sea and lowered into place along a 60m-wide, 16m-deep trench in the seabed.

In July, German and Danish media reported that around 30 supporters and activists of the Beltretter protest group held a gathering standing in the Baltic Sea at the Grüner Brink nature reserve near the Puttgarden ferry pier. They held a banner that read ‘Protect the Baltic Sea. Stop tunneling’ and voiced concern over possible damage to the environment and tourism in the Bay of Lübeck.

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

  • Mersey Gateway Bridge has won IABSE’s Outstanding Structure Award
    September 19, 2019
    The UK’s Mersey Gateway Bridge has picked up the Outstanding Structure Award 2019 from IABSE, the International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering* Judges described the bridge, designed by Cowi, as "an elegantly integrated solution for a multi-span concrete cable stay bridge in which form follows function". "Everyone involved with the design and construction the Mersey Gateway Bridge over the past six years knows that this is an incredibly special structure,” said Paul Sanders, Cowi’s p
  • Shortlist set for Lower Thames tunnel work
    April 9, 2021
    Bam Nuttal, Bouygues, Dragados and Hochtief are in the running for the UK project.
  • A6 project between Weinsberg and Wiesloch/Rauenberg set to start
    January 26, 2017
    Work will soon start on the €1.3 billion project to widen a stretch of the A6 motorway, one of Germany’s most congested highways. Both sides of the motorway between the Weinsberg and Wiesloch/Rauenberg junctions will be expanded. On 25 km of the section being expanded under the project – altogether 47.1 km – the number of lanes will be increased from four to six. The project also encompasses the construction of the 1.3km-long Neckartal Bridge. Preparatory work for the public-private partnership has
  • Russia to commission new Moscow-St Petersburg highway by 2020
    June 20, 2017
    Final delivery of the final stretch for Russia’s key highway project looks set to be delayed – Eugene Gerden writes. I now looks as if Russia’s most ambitious project in the field of road building in recent years, the building of a new high-speed road link between Moscow and St Petersburg, the country’s largest cities, will not be complete in time. The project was set up by the Russian government and several private investors. According to initial state plans, building of the new road should have been compl