Channel Tunnel
The Channel Tunnel (French: le tunnel sous la Manche), or Chunnel, is a 51.5km (31 mile) long rail tunnel beneath the English Channel at the Straits of Dover, connecting Folkestone, Kent in England to Coquelles near Calais in northern France. A long-standing and very expensive megaproject that saw several false starts, it was finally completed in 1994. It is the second-longest rail tunnel in the world, with the Seikan Tunnel in Japan being longer, but the undersea section of 39km (24 miles) is the longest undersea tunnel in the world. It is operated by Eurotunnel.
Historical proposals for, and attempts to start, a tunnel
A link between Great Britain and mainland Europe had been proposed on many occasions.
- 1802 Albert Mathieu-Favier, a French engineer, put forward a proposal for a tunnel. Passengers would travel through the tunnel in horse-drawn coaches, the road would be lit by oil lamps and a mid-tunnel island would have provided a fresh-air respite for the horses. The cost was estimated at one million pounds (in 1802)
- 1865 George Ward Hunt proposed the idea of a tunnel to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, William Ewart Gladstone.[1]
- 1868 Lord Granville declared the support of the British Government for the proposed tunnel.
- 1875 Peter William Barlow, who had worked extensively on the world's first underground railway, suggested a floating steel tube across the Channel. The idea was rejected.
- French & British Parliamentary bills passed to build the tunnel. Insufficient funds were raised and the concession ran out a year later.
- 1876 Extensive geological survey carried out; French sink two shafts.
- 1880 The South Eastern Railway (SER) arranges trial borings on the British side.
- 1881 Patented (Beaumont) boring machine drives a tunnel 897 yards (820 m) parallel to cliffs on the British side.
- Work begins by SER on Channel Tunnel; again insufficient funds. Submarine Continental Railway Company set up.
- 1882 Rival Channel Tunnel Company causes a rift in proceedings; adverse comments by media and an influential group (including Robert Browning and Alfred Lord Tennyson). Eventually work was halted by the Board of Trade because of military objections: the ease with which invaders could attack from the Continent was cited.
- 1922 Workers started boring a tunnel from below the chalk cliffs between Folkestone and Dover (now known as Samphire Hoe): after 400 feet (128 m) of tunnel had been completed, political objections again brought the project to an end.
After World War II the concept of the tunnel began to receive serious attention.
- 1955 Britain ceases its opposition to a Channel Tunnel on military grounds
- 1974-1975 Following Britain's entry into the Common Market, another attempt was made to construct a tunnel by the British and French governments. Trial borings were made on both sides. However a financial crisis meant that the British Prime Minister Harold Wilson cancelled the project as an economy measure.
The current tunnel
The tunnel consists of three parallel tunnels running between the respective portals, or tunnel entrances, at either end. There are two rail tunnels, measuring 7.6 m (25 feet) in diameter and about 30 m (98 feet) apart, which carry trains north-west and south-east. Between the rail tunnels is a service tunnel, 4.8 m (16 feet) in diameter, which is connected by cross-passages to the main tunnels at intervals of approximately 375 m (1,230 feet). The service tunnel, served by narrow rubber-tyred vehicles, gives maintenance workers access to the rail tunnels and provides a route for escape during emergencies.
The two running tunnels are directly linked every 250 m (820 feet) by 2 m diameter pressure relief ducts (PRDs) that pass over the top of the service tunnel and do not connect to it. The PRDs alleviate the piston effect of trains by allowing airflow from moving trains to pass into the other running tunnel. Additionally, there are two enormous caverns situated about one third of the distance from shore to shore containing a rail crossover between the main tunnels. These crossovers permit sections of the tunnel to be closed to traffic for maintenance, using single-line working in the other tunnel. The UK crossover at 156 m long, 18 m wide and 10 m high is the largest subsea cavern in the world and required extensive monitoring via almost 200 separate instrument stations.[2]
At each portal there is a major facility allowing for trains to disassemble and turn around, including customs, maintenance, and other necessary services.
Planning
In 1957 le Tunnel sous la Manche Study Group was formed. It reported in 1960 and recommended two main railway tunnels and a smaller service tunnel. The project was launched in 1973 but folded due to financial problems in 1975 after the construction of a 250 m (820 foot) test tunnel. According to Environment Secretary Anthony Crosland the immediate reason was that the two Channel Tunnel companies had given notice of abandonment to the Government because of excessive cost.
In 1984 the idea was relaunched with a joint British and French government request for proposals to build a privately-funded link. There were four proposals: two rail tunnels, a road tunnel and a bridge. Of the four submissions received, the one most closely resembling the 1973 plan was chosen, and announced on 20 January 1986. The Franco-British Channel Fixed Link Treaty was signed by the two governments in Canterbury, Kent on 12 February 1986 and ratified in 1987.
The planned route of the tunnel took it from Calais to Folkestone (a route rather longer than the shortest possible crossing) and the tunnel follows a single chalk stratum, which meant the tunnel was deeper than the previous attempt. For much of its route the tunnel is nearly 40 m (130 feet) under the sea floor, with the southern section being deeper than the northern.
Construction
Digging the tunnel took 13,000 workers over seven years, with tunnelling operations conducted simultaneously from both ends. The prime contractor for the construction was the Anglo-French TransManche Link (TML), a consortium of ten construction companies and five banks of the two countries. Engineers used large tunnel boring machines (TBMs, mobile excavation factories that combined drilling, material removal, and the process of shoring up the soft and permeable tunnel walls with a concrete lining).
In all, eleven TBMs were used on the Chunnel:
- three French TBMs driving from Sangatte to under the Channel,
- one French TBM driving the service tunnel from Sangatte cofferdam to the French portal,
- one French TBM driving one running tunnel from Sangatte cofferdam to the French portal, then the other running tunnel from the French portal back to Sangatte cofferdam,
- three British TBMs driving from Shakespeare Cliff to the British portal,
- three British TBMs driving from Shakespeare Cliff to under the Channel.
On December 1, 1990 the service tunnels broke through at the halfway point. TML carefully staged the break through for maximum effect: TML tunnellers Phillipe Cozette and Graham Fagg cut a heading between the two drives under the watchful eye of the media.
The main rail tunnels met on May 22, 1991 and on June 28, 1991, each accompanied by a breakthrough ceremony. When each pair of TBMs met, the French TBM was dismantled while the British one was diverted into the rock, concreted in place, and abandoned.
The next few years were spent refining, equipping, and finishing the tunnels. In 1994 the Channel Tunnel was considered completed.
In the end, almost 5 million cubic yards (4 million m³) of chalk were excavated on the British side, much of which was dumped below Shakespeare Cliff near Folkestone to reclaim 90 acres (0.36 km²) of land from the sea. Called Samphire Hoe, the area is now a popular park. In all, 10.5 million cubic yards (8 million m³) of soil were removed, at an average rate of 2,400 tonnes/hour.
Completion
The British and French efforts, which had been guided by laser surveying methods, met first with the completion of the undersea service (access) tunnel. A small pilot hole broke through without ceremony on 30 October 1990.[3] The difference in the centrelines of the two ends of the tunnel was surveyed as just 358mm (14.1 inches) horizontally and 58mm (2.3 inches) vertically.[4] When the two ends of the undersea service tunnel met 40m (130 feet) beneath the English Channel seabed on 1 December 1990 it became possible to walk on dry land from Great Britain to continental Europe for the first time since the end of the last ice age 8,500 years ago. The tunnel was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II and French President François Mitterrand in a ceremony held in Calais on 6 May 1994.
Statistics
The Channel Tunnel is 31 miles (50 km) long, of which 24 miles (39 km) are undersea. The average depth is 150 feet (45 m) underneath the seabed. It opened for business in late 1994, offering three principal services: a shuttle for vehicles, Eurostar passenger service linking London with Paris and Brussels, and through freight trains.
In 2005, 8.2 million passengers travelled through the tunnel on Eurostar while in the same year Eurotunnel carried 2,047,166 cars, 1,308,786 trucks and 77,267 coaches on its shuttle trains.
Rail freight carried through the Channel Tunnel was 1.6 million tonnes (2005).
Passenger travel through the Channel Tunnel increased by 15% in 2004 and 2.4% in 2005 up to 7.45 million. Travel is expected to continue increasing in 2006 and again in 2007 when the Channel Tunnel Rail Link to London opens. Passenger travel through the Channel Tunnel may grow another 40% for London-Paris and 56% for London-Brussels by displacing air routes.
A journey through the tunnel lasts about 20 minutes; from start to end, a shuttle train journey totals about 35 minutes, including travelling a large loop to turn the train around. Eurostar trains travel considerably slower than their top speed while going through the tunnel (approximately 100 mph or 160 km/h, rather than their maximum of 186mph or 300km/h) to fit in with the shuttle trains and avoid problems with heat generated in the tunnels by friction.
At completion, it was estimated that the whole project cost around £10 billion, including a cost overrun of 80 percent. The tunnel has been operating at a significant loss, and shares of the stock that funded the project lost 90% of their value between 1989 and 1998. The company announced a loss of £1.33 billion in 2003 and £570 million in 2004, and has been in constant negotiations with its creditors. In its defence, Eurotunnel cites a lack of use of the infrastructure, an inability to attract business because of high access charges, too much debt which causes a heavy interest payment burden, and a volume of both passenger and freight traffic 38% and 24%, respectively, of that which was forecast.
The American Society of Civil Engineers has declared the tunnel to be one of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World.
Location
Location | Coordinates |
---|---|
English portal | 51°05′49″N 1°09′21″E / 51.09694°N 1.15587°E |
Mid-point | 51°00′45″N 1°30′15″E / 51.012506°N 1.504076°E |
French portal | 50°55′22″N 1°46′50″E / 50.92283°N 1.78053°E |
Operation
The tunnel is operated by Eurotunnel (Eurotunnel plc in the UK, and Eurotunnel SA in France).
Four types of train services operate:
- Eurostar high speed passenger trains. These connect London's Waterloo station (named after the Napoleonic battle between England and France) with the Gare du Nord station in Paris and Brussels Midi/Zuid station, with stops at Ashford, Calais-Frethun and Lille. Eurostar services will switch from Waterloo to St Pancras railway station when the new Channel Tunnel Rail Link railway line is completed between the tunnel and London in 2007, when the route to Waterloo will be abandoned.
- Eurotunnel Shuttle passenger shuttle trains. These carry cars, coaches and vans between Sangatte (Calais/Coquelles) and Folkestone. Enclosed rail wagons, some double-deck, with minor amenities permit drive-on and drive-off operation; passengers stay with their vehicles. Formerly marketed as Le Shuttle.
- Eurotunnel freight shuttle trains. These carry lorries on open rail wagons, with the lorry drivers travelling in a separate passenger coach.
- Freight trains. These trains carry conventional rail freight or container loads between Europe and Great Britain. They operated jointly by EWS of the UK, and French national operator SNCF
Eurostar trains travel at high speeds in France and on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, where the tracks are modern and custom-made for the standard TGV cruising speed of 186 mph (300 km/h), and within the tunnel at up to 100 mph (160 km/h). The first section of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, between the tunnel and Ebbsfleet International railway station in North Kent, opened in 2003. Until the second section between Ebbsfleet and St Pancras opens in 2007 Eurostar trains use 'traditional' lines for the final part of the journey into Waterloo, running at much lower speeds.
There have been proposals for local passenger rail services linking Kent with towns in the Pas de Calais, similar to the local trains that run between Zealand and southern Sweden across the Oresund Bridge, but such a service remains unlikely.
In September 2006, EWS announced that due to cessation of UK-French government subsidies of £52million per annum to cover the Channel Tunnel "Minimum User Charge" (a subsidy of around £13,000 per train, at a traffic level of 4,000 trains per annum), that freight trains post 30 November would presently stop running. EWS commented that the equivalent charge from the same distance from UK Network Rail would be £300, but that at current traffic levels the charge was effectively £8,000 per train. Accepting that the Channel Tunnel was a special case, and in light of UK Department of Industry intransigence, EWS said that they could not economically justify running trains to their customers in light of the higher charges. EWS commented that they believed that the UK Government's position was in part being defined by the current economic state and future of the Channel Tunnel operator, and its negotiations on refinancing its debt.[5]
Fire
The Channel Tunnel's only serious operational incident was a fire on 18 November 1996 aboard a shuttle train carrying trucks and trailers. No lives were lost, due in large part to the safety of the tunnel design and the response of safety crews from France and the UK. The tunnel suffered £200 million of major structural damage over about a kilometre of length, and its safety procedures and emergency services liaison were substantially revised afterwards.
A less severe incident occurred on 21 August 2006, when a lorry aboard a shuttle train caught fire. Crews and drivers were evacuated and the fire was quickly extinguished. Service interruptions occurred as the train and tunnel were inspected for damage.[6]
Sovereignty
As one of the first international undersea rail tunnels, the Channel Tunnel required an inventive approach to border controls. The official border between France and the United Kingdom is marked by a stainless steel band, roughly halfway through the tunnel (the UK side is somewhat longer, because a longer part of the tunnel is on land). The British half is part of the District of Dover and the English county of Kent. As a practical matter border controls are handled at boarding or on the train. A detailed three-way treaty between the United Kingdom, France, and Belgium governs border controls, with the establishment of control zones wherein the officers of the other nation may exercise limited customs and law enforcement powers.[7] For most purposes these are at either end of the tunnel; for certain city-to-city trains the train itself represents a control zone.
In an unusual move, the British and French governments agreed to provide immigration staff at opposite ends of the tunnel; thus the French immigration control posts are located in the United Kingdom, while the British ones are in France. This leads occasionally to unusual incidents, for example when a French police officer wandered into the non-international part of Waterloo station while carrying a firearm.[8] In the 1990s, the French authorities tried to arrest a French national working in the British terminal at Folkestone who had been evading French military service.
Asylum seekers
Illegal immigrants and suspected asylum seekers have been known to use the tunnel to attempt to enter Britain. By 1997, the problem had already attracted international press attention, and the French Red Cross opened a refugee centre at Sangatte in 1999, using a warehouse once used for tunnel construction; by 2002 it housed up to 1500 persons at a time, most of them trying to get to the UK.[9] At one point, large numbers came from Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran, but African and Eastern European countries are also represented.[10] Most migrants who got into Britain found some way to ride a freight train, but others simply walked. Though the facilities were fenced, airtight security was deemed impossible; refugees would even jump from bridges onto moving trains. In several incidents persons were injured during the crossing; others tampered with railroad equipment, causing delays and requiring repairs.[11] Eurotunnel said it was losing £5m per month due to the problem.[12] Over a dozen refugees died in various crossing attempts.Cite error: A <ref>
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(see the help page). Immigrants have also arrived as legitimate Eurostar passengers without proper entry papers.[13]
Local authorities in both France and the UK called for the closure of Sangatte, and Eurotunnel twice sought an injunction against the centre.Cite error: A <ref>
tag is missing the closing </ref>
(see the help page). In 2002, after the European Commission told France that it was in breach of European Union rules on the free transfer of goods, due to the delays and closures as a result of its poor security, a double fence was built at a cost of £5 million, reducing the numbers of refugees detected each week reaching Britain on goods trains from 250 to almost none.[14] Other measures included CCTV cameras and increased police patrols.[15] At the end of 2002, the Sangatte center was closed after the UK and France agreed to take shares of the refugees.[16]
Environmental barriers
The UK was especially keen on ensuring that the Channel Tunnel could not become an entry point for unwanted invasive species or animal or plant diseases. There are inspection points at both ends to ensure that banned items are not transported. Since Britain is rabies-free, concerns included the possibility of wild animals such as foxes. Electrified grids were installed, but never worked satisfactorily, and were supplemented by fencing, CCTV, sensors, and human trackers.[17] In time rabies control measures by France and other EU members reduced the risk, so the barriers were removed.[18]
Financial trouble
Eurotunnel, the company that built and funded the project and currently runs the shuttle services, has been in financial difficulties almost from the start. Attempts at solving the problems have included cutting the number of trains per hour on a normal day from four to two, reducing staff and streamlining the business. These measures come under the umbrella of "Project DARE".
Second tunnel
Eurotunnel has investigated the possibility of a second tunnel through the Channel, as required under the Concession from the two Governments, but the economic case has not been made. The planning has not progressed past the feasibility stage.
Appearances in film and television
Given its status as one of the 20th century's most significant feats of engineering, it is perhaps surprising that the Channel Tunnel has not become more of a cultural icon (although admittedly other "modern wonders of the world" such as the Golden Gate Bridge and the Empire State Building are more photogenic).
The Channel Tunnel features in the climax of the film Mission: Impossible (Brian De Palma, 1996), in which Tom Cruise, clinging on to a high-speed train, is chased by a helicopter into what is supposedly the Channel Tunnel. The largely CGI sequence contains many factual errors in addition to the physical impossibility of such a feat. In the film the tunnel is shown as a single rectangular twin-track tunnel, and the trains shown are standard French TGVs but without overhead wires. In reality the Channel Tunnel uses separate single-track tunnels for the two directions of travel, while SNCF passenger trains do not operate in the tunnel. The sequence showing the train approaching the tunnel was reportedly filmed in the Upper Nithsdale valley on the Kilmarnock to Dumfries section of the Glasgow South Western Line in Scotland.
Chunnel was the name of a fictional movie in a 1995 episode of the popular U.S. television series Seinfeld entitled "The Pool Guy". Chunnel was an action/disaster film which featured the Tunnel as its primary setting.
Chunnel was the name of a fictional disaster movie in The Dirty Movie Book (1988) by John Brosnan and Leroy Mitchell. A script of the spoof movie appeared in the book.
The Channel Tunnel was featured in an episode of Megastructures on the National Geographic Channel, and was placed as number one on their Top 10 list of MegaStructures around the world.
The Channel Tunnel was seen briefly in the travel documentary Long Way Round.
The Tunnel has featured in many of the BBC's Top Gear episodes.
The Tunnel and Waterloo Station played a part (albeit briefly) in the "Paris" episode of Absolutely Fabulous, where Edina, Patsy and Saffron travel to Paris for a fashion shoot.
The Channel Tunnel featured as a level in the video game Tomb Raider 3: The Lost Artifact. In the level the tunnel is damaged by explosions caused by a weird goo.
The Channel Tunnel featured significantly in the 2005 Cédric Klapisch film The Russian Dolls.
The Tunnel was a feature in the 2007 film Mr Bean's Holiday, in which Mr Bean (played by Rowan Atkinson) experiences trouble in both UK and French Eurostar terminals and upon the train itself.
See also
- Seikan Tunnel, a partially undersea railway tunnel in Japan slightly bigger than the Channel Tunnel
References
- ^ Source: William Gladstone, 1888.[not specific enough to verify]
- ^ Channel Tunnel - Mott MacDonald Project Page
- ^ Glenn Frankel (3rd October 1990). "Britain and France Link Up--at Last". The Washington Post.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ Jeremy Wilson & Jerome Spick (1994). "Eurotunnel The Illustrated Journey". HarperCollinsPublishers.
- ^ Dominic O'Connell (September 3 2006). "Chunnel cash row threatens freight trains". The Times.
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requires|url=
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(help); Text "http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,2769-2340015,00.html" ignored (help) - ^ "Lorry fire closes Channel Tunnel". BBC Online. 21 August 2006. Retrieved 2006-08-21.
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(help) - ^ The CPS: Channel Tunnel - Control Zones, Crown Prosecution Service
- ^ Johnston, Philip, "French say sorry for officer's gun at Waterloo", The Daily Telegraph, 2006-04-06
- ^ Pierre Kremer (February 2002). "Sangatte: A place of hope and despair". The Magazine of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. Retrieved 2006-08-04.
- ^ Caryl Phillips (November 17, 2001). "Strangers in a strange land". The Guardian. Retrieved 2006-08-04.
- ^ Avril Stephens (July 31, 2001). "Desperate journeys fraught with danger". CNN. Retrieved 2006-08-04.
- ^ "Europe's most notorious refugee camp". BBC News. 12 July 2002. Retrieved 2006-08-05.
- ^ "UK/Ireland: Asylum (news digest)". Migration News. 1998 (?). Retrieved 2006-08-04.
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(help) - ^ "Sangatte asylum talks due". BBC. 26 September, 2002. Retrieved 2006-08-04.
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(help) - ^ "Tunnel security to be tightened". BBC. 31 May, 2002. Retrieved 2006-08-04.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ Philip Delves Broughton and Andrew Sparrow (September 27 2002). "Blunkett reaches deal to shut Sangatte camp". London Telegraph. Retrieved 2006-08-04.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ "Chunnel urged to check rabies". The Independent. 3 February 1997. Retrieved 2006-11-14.
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: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ "Lords Hansard text for 6 May 2004". Government of the United Kingdom. 6 May 2004. Retrieved 2006-11-14.
External links
- Eurotunnel
- Channel Tunnel History
- Channel Tunnel Facts - a selection of historical and geological facts about the tunnel
- Channel Tunnel Fire - detailed technical summary of the emergency response
- Engineering specifications
- Another page with history of Channel Tunnel
- A detailed report on the background, construction and financial history of the Channel Tunnel.
- TBM Robbins which is the largest manufacturer of TBMs
- Google Maps aerial photo of Tunnel at Cheriton
- Proposed Trans-Global Highway and Channel Tunnel
- BBC News archive report and video of tunnel breakthrough 1 December 1990
- Template:Fr icon Amicale des bâtisseurs du tunnel sous la Manche
- Channel Tunnel - Mott MacDonald Project Page