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Transportation

Denmark and Germany Now Building the World's Longest Immersed Tunnel (cnn.com) 78

Descending up to 40 meters beneath the Baltic Sea, the world's longest immersed tunnel will link Denmark and Germany, slashing journey times between the two countries when it opens in 2029. CNN Travel reports: After more than a decade of planning, construction started on the Fehmarnbelt Tunnel in 2020 and in the months since a temporary harbor has been completed on the Danish side. It will host the factory that will soon build the 89 massive concrete sections that will make up the tunnel. "The expectation is that the first production line will be ready around the end of the year, or beginning of next year," said Henrik Vincentsen, CEO of Femern A/S, the state-owned Danish company in charge of the project. "By the beginning of 2024 we have to be ready to immerse the first tunnel element."

The tunnel, which will be 18 kilometers (11.1 miles) long, is one of Europe's largest infrastructure projects, with a construction budget of over 7 billion euros ($7.1 billion). [...] It will be built across the Fehmarn Belt, a strait between the German island of Fehmarn and the Danish island of Lolland, and is designed as an alternative to the current ferry service from Rodby and Puttgarden, which carries millions of passengers every year. Where the crossing now takes 45 minutes by ferry, it will take just seven minutes by train and 10 minutes by car. The tunnel, whose official name is Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link, will also be the longest combined road and rail tunnel anywhere in the world. It will comprise two double-lane motorways -- separated by a service passageway -- and two electrified rail tracks.
"Today, if you were to take a train trip from Copenhagen to Hamburg, it would take you around four and a half hours," says Jens Ole Kaslund, technical director at Femern A/S, the state-owned Danish company in charge of the project. "When the tunnel will be completed, the same journey will take two and a half hours."

"Today a lot of people fly between the two cities, but in the future it will be better to just take the train," he adds. The same trip by car will be around an hour faster than today, taking into account time saved by not lining up for the ferry.
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Denmark and Germany Now Building the World's Longest Immersed Tunnel

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  • Lolland (Score:5, Funny)

    by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Tuesday September 20, 2022 @09:04PM (#62899993)

    the Danish island of Lolland

    Just like Holland, but funnier.

    • So maybe we should call this "The Lolland Tunnel"?

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday September 20, 2022 @10:37PM (#62900163)

    It's currently a 45-minute ferry trip; after this tunnel is dug it'll be a 10-minute car trip. It's currently a 4.5 hour train trip; afterward it'll be a 2.5 hour train trip. Is that really worth seven billion Euros?

    It's not my money, so I guess I'm mainly asking any locals for their opinion.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday September 20, 2022 @11:11PM (#62900203)

      It's currently a 45-minute ferry trip; after this tunnel is dug it'll be a 10-minute car trip. It's currently a 4.5 hour train trip; afterward it'll be a 2.5 hour train trip.

      You are comparing apples & oranges.

      10 minutes is the time to transit the tunnel.

      2.5 hours is the time to travel the entire distance from Hamburg to Copenhagen. The tunnel transit is only a small part of that.

      • Per TFS, it's 2.5 hours versus 4.5 hours - not versus 10 minutes. The 10 minute comparison was against the current 45 minutes to cover the same distance.

    • by ruddk ( 5153113 )

      Well it costs $120 each way with the ferry unless you have planned a month ahead and can arrive at a specific time so I would say there is plenty of money.
      And since they apparently have removed the lunch/dinner buffet in the restaurant and replaced it with cold burgers, the driving break has just become annoying.
      If I need to go longer than Hamburg and charge the car, I’d rather take a break at the supercharger in Braak where the good bakery is with also has sandwiches.

      • by tragedy ( 27079 )

        Is it $120 each way? I looked it up and it said around 350 kr, which would be around $32, but maybe that's a special rate from what you're saying. Someone else was asking if 7 billion Euros was worth it and I was comparing against ferry costs with a speculative number of trips per year (two million) and a speculative tunnel lifetime (50 years) and came up with it costing about twice as much as the ferry with two million, but less if it was a bit over four million. If the ferry is actually $120, then the tun

        • by BranMan ( 29917 )

          You also need to consider that taking a ferry is a pain. So, the traffic going from Germany to Denmark and back will likely triple (or more) over what the traffic is now on the ferry. AND, some portion of the air traffic will use the tunnel instead. AND, that will create a "higher traffic" corridor on the route, encouraging growth, industrialization, shopping, etc.

          Can't just count the ferry it replaces - it does a whole lot more than that. I would say look at the impact that the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tu

          • by tragedy ( 27079 )

            You also need to consider that taking a ferry is a pain. So, the traffic going from Germany to Denmark and back will likely triple (or more) over what the traffic is now on the ferry. AND, some portion of the air traffic will use the tunnel instead. AND, that will create a "higher traffic" corridor on the route, encouraging growth, industrialization, shopping, etc.

            Oh sure. That's very true. I was just using the traffic on the ferry as a baseline. Also, they just said that millions of people used the ferry and I took the bare minimum that could mean to be two million, but it could actually be a lot more. I went into it more in my other post. I also considered the value of time wasted although I didn't put a specific value on it and I also didn't put a value on the distress caused by having to deal with the ferry beyond just the extra time.

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      Multiply that by the number of people and opportunity costs. In Colombia they are building a series of tunnels, some kilometers long, through the mountains. The express purpose is reduce the time it takes to transport goods. It is a lot of money but will potentially generate a lot of savings and increased income.

      It is like wasting money on a bus when you could just walk the three miles.

    • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Wednesday September 21, 2022 @04:27AM (#62900587)
      I think obviously it's worth the money, assuming its delivered on budget. The ferry is expensive, and sailing in all weather can be unpleasant. And it might be 45 minutes by ferry but that doesn't take into account traveling to/from the port on minor roads, embarking and disembarking or the hassle of booking a cross and paying for it. Replacing that with a tunnel (and upgraded roads) that is open all weather is obviously going to make it far easier for the movement of goods & people. I'm sure they'll whack a toll on the road which will help pay back the cost and people will be happy to pay given it's still cheaper and more convenient than what went before.
    • If this were the USA, the train company would be suing the tunnel company for loss of profits.

      But seriously, what's not to like about the high speed train from Copenhagen to Hamburg or Berlin taking 2 hours less time?

      There's a deliberate policy & plans in place to connect the whole of the EU with high speed rail networks. This is just one of the more spectacular projects out of many. Laying train tracks through some of the mountainous regions (e.g. Alps & Pyrenees) will be even more spectacular
      • A shortsighted train company would. This tunnel includes a rail line so it shortens the trip of any train whether it is freight or passenger.
      • If this were the USA, the train company would be suing the tunnel company for loss of profits.

        No, some coalition of patchouli-scented San Francisco activists would be monkey-wrenching the tunnel company's construction equipment in the name of whatever tribe had owned the land the tunnel passes through before the end of the Ice Age raised the ocean level and flooded it.

    • Don't forget that it's not just passenger trains. Lots of freight trains will also pass through there a lot faster. It'll add up; not overnight, but it will.
    • by tragedy ( 27079 )

      Is that really worth seven billion Euros?

      They say in the summary that millions of people take the ferry every year. So that seems to be a minimum of two million trips per year using the tunnel, which will probably be good for at least 50 years. So that would be about 70 Euros per per trip. That's more than two hours of driving will typically cost (if you don't place any value on the time of the driver) and about twice what the ferry costs (once again, if you place no value on the time of the person making the trip). If it's more like four million

    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      It's currently a 45-minute ferry trip; after this tunnel is dug it'll be a 10-minute car trip. It's currently a 4.5 hour train trip; afterward it'll be a 2.5 hour train trip. Is that really worth seven billion Euros?

      The time savings of 10^5 - 10^6 people per year over a decade or two easily is worth 7 billion Euro.

    • From the standpoint of cargo and shipping, it cuts 35 minutes in transit time at a minimum. Loading times are also cut as well as the current crossing is by ferry. Up until 2019 the ferry included freight trains. Currently freight trains use a different, longer route while passenger trains still use the ferry.
    • It's currently a 45-minute ferry trip; after this tunnel is dug it'll be a 10-minute car trip. It's currently a 4.5 hour train trip; afterward it'll be a 2.5 hour train trip. Is that really worth seven billion Euros?

      It's not my money, so I guess I'm mainly asking any locals for their opinion.

      Well it sounds like it will be 2 hours faster than the train and an hour faster than flying. Lets just split the difference and say it saves 1.5 hours per journey?

      As for how many passengers, I couldn't find a clear estimate but currently 1000 train passengers/day and 2 million cars by ferry per year [tunnel-online.info].

      Lets assume the tunnel takes 25% of those cars and their average occupancy is 1.5 passengers (and same for the train passengers). So
      1.5*2e7*.25/365 + 250 = 20,797 passengers/day

      Now take that number * 1.5hrs over

      • Agree with most of your statement, but peace and stability? There are roads and trains directly to and from blue states and red states in the US and it hasn't done that.

        • Agree with most of your statement, but peace and stability? There are roads and trains directly to and from blue states and red states in the US and it hasn't done that.

          It's hasn't solved it, but it has probably helped. In general, the more travel you have between regions the less conflict you'll have between them. A major reason for the existence of the EU is to prevent war between European powers, and unrestricted travel between EU states is a big part of that.

    • Current ferry crossing takes about 45 minutes.. And millions of passengers use the ferry yearly, according to the article. Lets put it at the minimum to qualify as millions - 2 million.

      The tunnel will drop the crossing time to 7 or 10 minutes, depending on mode of transport (car or rail).

      Lets call it 10 minutes. Thats 35 minutes savings per passenger, per trip. So at just 2 million passengers per year, that is just over 133 years of time savings (according to google), per year.

      If it's more then 2 million, i

    • It's currently a 45-minute ferry trip; after this tunnel is dug it'll be a 10-minute car trip. It's currently a 4.5 hour train trip; afterward it'll be a 2.5 hour train trip. Is that really worth seven billion Euros?

      It's not my money, so I guess I'm mainly asking any locals for their opinion.

      You are thinking it in terms of individual cases, and not as a whole, in the aggregate.

      Think of it this way. Imagine we are improving a network, and we only focus on the average RTT of a single IP packet as the sole justification for ROI, with the network improvements considered in isolation.

      In such a case, we are ignoring other valuable considerations of the network improvement itself, such as bandwidth, throughput/goodput, IOPS, packet sizes, as well as the impact these improvements can have on an ent

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by broude ( 877830 )

      Yes, it's worth it from an EU perspective.
      The EU's main goal is better connecting their countries. At the moment parts of Denmark and Sweden are not efficiently connected to mainland Europe. You have to take regional trains or winding motorways in a C shaped route, to get between Copenhagen and Hamburg (for example). They also pass through the center of Denmark's 3rd biggest city. Sweden is worse because they have to traverse through half of Denmark to get to Germany.
      I use these motorways in my daily commut

  • "Today a lot of people fly between the two cities, but in the future it will be better to just take the train," he adds. The same trip by car will be around an hour faster than today, taking into account time saved by not lining up for the ferry.

    This simple arithmetic is far beyond the abilities of the U.S. outside a few routes in the east. I don't think I will see it in California in my lifetime.

    • Don't be so negative. The high-speed rail route from Madera to Fresno is already under construction.

    • This simple arithmetic is far beyond the abilities of the U.S.

      The California high-speed rail project would make sense if it cost $10B and could be completed in five years.

      But it will cost ten times that much and take 30 years to complete. That is insane.

      I don't think I will see it in California in my lifetime.

      Indeed. That's the problem.

  • TFS claims that this will be the world's longest underwater tunnel, but it won't be. The Chunnel [wikipedia.org] is at least three times as long.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by spacec0w ( 894586 )

      TFS claims that this will be the world's longest underwater tunnel, but it won't be. The Chunnel [wikipedia.org] is at least three times as long.

      From TFA: "Although longer than the Fehmarnbelt Tunnel, the Channel Tunnel was made using a boring machine, rather than by immersing pre-built tunnel sections." Keyword left out is "immersed", which seems is a different type of tunnel construction technique than was used for the Chunnel.

      • TFS claims that this will be the world's longest underwater tunnel, but it won't be. The Chunnel [wikipedia.org] is at least three times as long.

        From TFA: "Although longer than the Fehmarnbelt Tunnel, the Channel Tunnel was made using a boring machine, rather than by immersing pre-built tunnel sections." Keyword left out is "immersed", which seems is a different type of tunnel construction technique than was used for the Chunnel.

        That's right, the "immersed tube" tunnel is made from prefabricated sections that are floated and towed into position and then sunk to rest on the seabed: https://railsystem.net/immerse... [railsystem.net]

        This is a technique used for shallow bodies of water - pressure on the tunnel increases with depth, so a tunnel under deep water needs to go through the rock _under_ the seabed. As you say, like the Channel Tunnel between England and France.

    • You are correct. The actual article says:

      By way of comparison, the 50-kilometer (31-mile) Channel Tunnel linking England and France, completed in 1993, cost the equivalent of £12 billion ($13.6 million) in today's money. Although longer than the Fehmarnbelt Tunnel, the Channel Tunnel was made using a boring machine, rather than by immersing pre-built tunnel sections.

      So the main difference is that this tunnel will carry road and rail traffic, while the Channel tunnel is exclusively a rail link (with cars carried on trains).

      ISTM the qualification of this being an "immersed" tunnel would only be of interest to tunnel engineers. For everyone else, it's irrelevant.

      • ISTM the qualification of this being an "immersed" tunnel would only be of interest to tunnel engineers. For everyone else, it's irrelevant.

        Tunnel engineers and nerds. You know, "News for nerds, stuff that matters".

  • Forty meters means 4 atmospheres, which is a lot of pressure indeed.
  • but in the future it will be better to just take the train," - sure it will be better for the environment eventually, if the train is booked full and enough of those trains full of people who would have otherwise taken the ferry or plane have taken that route to offset the building of that tunnel. With 1h travel time by plane (and if you calculate half an hour for checkin, which is the maximum time I needed for my last couple of European inland-flights) it will still be faster.
    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      sure it will be better for the environment eventually, if the train is booked full and enough of those trains full of people who would have otherwise taken the ferry or plane have taken that route to offset the building of that tunnel.

      Highways and high speed rail have a much higher capacity than a ferry. In other words, a lot more people can move through this infrastructure than the ferry service could ever have accommodated.

  • I want a little bit information
  • The cited article has nice artist's renderings of the entryway, the inside, and the factory, but no route map.
    It always amazes me when media fails to include a map.
    Wikipedia has a map: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • The cited article has nice artist's renderings of the entryway, the inside, and the factory, but no route map.
      It always amazes me when media fails to include a map.
      Wikipedia has a map: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      And that is what makes the value of the tunnel so clear. Because the island of Lolland is already connected to mainland Scandinavia by bridges and tunnels, this project will be the first direct link to Germany.

  • 7 billions??? Amateurs... It's nothing compared to a highway in Romania, planned to cost 90+ billion euros...
  • From the summary:
    > the tunnel will link Denmark and Germany, slashing journey
    > times between the two countries when it opens in 2029

    This is just a ridiculous summary. Denmark and Germany share a land border.
    Depending on where in Denmark and where in Germany you're travelling to/from,
    a journey from the one country to the other can be thirty seconds long. There's
    not a lot of room to improve on that.

    What the tunnel is actually doing, is linking a couple of Denmark's major islands (one
    of which notably h

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