HUGE TUNNEL FOR SHIPS
TO BE
BUILT IN NORWAY
G'day folks,
Here is a brilliant piece of ingenuity - and common sense. It’s a way to bypass the infamous Stad
peninsula, where the sea is so rough it scared the Vikings.
The Stad
peninsula, which juts out of the Northwestern part of Norway, has long
made sailors’ lives more difficult. Getting around it means wrangling with
choppy seas, weird currents, and the highest winds in the country. Even the
Vikings didn’t like to do it, often choosing to port their ships over land
instead.
Now, after centuries
of planning, Norway has committed to a solution: they’re going to carve a
ship-sized tunnel into the peninsula, Digital Journal reports.
After all, if you can’t go over it, you can’t go under it, and you can’t go
around it, you’ve got to go through it.
“The Stad tunnel for
boats will finally be built,” Norwegian Transport Minister Ketil Solvik-Olsen
said in a statement. This plan, he continued, would ensure “a safer and more
reliable passage of the most dangerous and harsh waters for the transport of
goods along the Norwegian coasts.”
The tunnel will be about 100 feet wide and one
mile long, and will burrow through the narrowest part of the peninsula, between
Moldefjorden and Kjødepollen. In mock-ups from the
Norwegian Coastal Administration, it looks a lot like a car tunnel,
complete with eerie blue lights and the occasional emergency phone.
Norse engineers have
floated the idea of such a tunnel regularly since 1874. After a number of
cost-benefit analyses, the government officially signed on yesterday, as part
of the larger National Transport Plan. Construction is expected to begin in
2019—at which point being a Viking will be easier than ever.
Clancy's comment: Amazing, eh?
I'm ...
Most unusual and effective. It simplicity could start a new trend in other dangerous seaways.
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