“It will provide a safe journey around Stad, laying the foundation for the region’s industrial development and establishment as a world-class tourist destination. It will also facilitate the shifting of more transport from road to sea,” said Bjorn Lodemel, an MP for the Sogn and Fjordane region that includes the peninsula.
The tunnel will allow up to 120 vessels to travel under a mountain rather than navigate the dangerous waters of the Stadhavet Sea, which experiences about 100 storm days annually. At least 33 people have lost their lives in the area since the end of the Second World War, according to reports.
“The idea to build a ship tunnel has been discussed for more than a century. The first plans were drawn as early as in the 1870s, while Stad has been known as a troublesome area for ages. Historians have even documented how the Vikings used to drag their ships on shore instead of risking the Stadhavet,” according to Visit Norway’s website.
The Norwegian Coastal Administration (NCA) will submit its findings to the Department of Transport in May 2017, according to the tunnel’s project manager Terje Andreassen as quoted by Business Insider.
Norway is considered a world leader in tunneling, having constructed the Laerdal – the world’s longest road tunnel – also in the western region northeast of Bergen, at just over 24.5 kilometers long.
Source: https://www.rt.com/business/380812-norway-ship-tunnel-stadhavet-sea/
NORWAY2017-03-27













