The Strait of Gibraltar crossing is a hypothetical bridge or tunnel spanning the Strait of Gibraltar (about 14 km or 9 miles at its narrowest point) that would connect Europe and Africa. The governments of Spain and Morocco appointed a joint committee[1] to investigate the feasibility of linking the two continents in 1979, which resulted in the much broader Euromed Transport project.[2]
In January 2021, it was reported that the United Kingdom and Morocco would discuss building the crossing between Gibraltar and Tangiers.[3] As of 2023, the completion of Morocco's first national high-speed rail line from Casablanca to Tangiers has led to renewed interest in a tunnel that would connect the line to Spain's own high-speed network, which uses the same gauge and electrification as the northern section of Morocco's Casablanca-Tangier high-speed line.[4]
Several engineers have designed bridges on various alignments and with differing structural configurations. A proposal by Professor T.Y. Lin for a crossing between Point Oliveros and Point Cires featured deep piers, a length of 140NaN0, 3000feet towers, and a 5000adj=onNaNadj=on span, more than twice the length of the current longest bridge span.[5] According to OPAC this bridge would have cost around US$15 Billion. A 2004 proposal by architect Eugene Tsui was for a floating and submerged bridge connected at a three-mile-wide (4.8 km) floating island in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea.[6]
Various tunnels have been proposed. Spain first proposed a modern tunnel under the Strait of Gibraltar in 1930. A major problem arose when the engineers hired by the Spanish government discovered that the material under the Strait was extremely hard rock, making tunnelling impossible with the available technology.[7] One engineering solution was to fix, using cables, a prefabricated concrete tunnel to the floor of the Strait. This tunnel would handle automotive and train traffic.[8]
A 2008 geological study cast doubt on the tunnel's feasibility. In March 2009, a contract was issued for a joint system linking the Moroccan French: Société Nationale d'Etudes du Détroit de Gibraltar (SNED) with its Spanish counterpart, Spanish; Castilian: Sociedad española de estudios para la comunicación fija a través del Estrecho de Gibraltar SA (SECEGSA). A three-year study for a railway tunnel was announced in 2003. SNED and SECEGSA commissioned several seabed surveys.
The Strait depth extends to 900m (3,000feet) on the shortest route, although it is only about 300 metres deep slightly further west, in a region known as the Camarinal Sill; the European and African tectonic plates meet around this area. The shortest crossing is 14km (09miles). The proposed route of 23km (14miles) is west of Tarifa and to the east of Tangier. The tunnel is likely to be about 34km (21miles) in all. It is proposed that a connection would have to be made to the Spanish high speed railway network, which has a line projected to be built from Cádiz to Málaga via Algeciras.
A report[9] [10] [11] on the feasibility of the tunnel was presented to the EU in 2009. A further project study is under development by a group of specialist consultants from SYSTRA, Amberg and COWI.
The political origins of the project arise from the Common Hispanic-Moroccan Declaration of Fez, of 16 June 1979, and signed by the kings of Spain and Morocco.[12] One consequence of the declaration was the creation in of SECEGSA, the Spanish government-funded corporation whose job is to study and promote the crossing.[13]
In December 2003, Spain and Morocco agreed[14] [15] to explore the construction of an underwater rail tunnel to connect their rail systems. The tunnel would have linked Cape Malabata near Tangier with Punta Paloma in the El Estrecho Natural Park west of Gibraltar.[16] In late 2006, Lombardi Engineering Ltd, a Swiss engineering and design company, was retained to draft a design for a railway tunnel.[17] According to the company, the main differences between the construction of this tunnel and that of the Channel Tunnel, linking France and Great Britain, are the depth of the sea and the geological conditions. The area under the Strait is less stable than that under the English Channel. An active major geologic fault, the Azores–Gibraltar Transform Fault, bisects the Strait, and severe earthquakes have occurred in the area. The presence of two deep Quaternary clay channels in the middle of the Strait makes construction complex,[9] causing doubts about the feasibility of the project and proposals for an exploratory tunnel.[18]
No official figures about the cost of the project had been announced by 2007, but previous estimates exceeded €5 billion.[19]
In February 2023, after a high-level bilateral meeting between Spain and Morocco, the Moroccan and Spanish governments resolved to relaunch the project for an undersea railway tunnel under the Strait of Gibraltar. The project is planned to start construction in 2030.[20] In June 2023, the Spanish government announced a €2.3 million funding package for a joint Spanish-Moroccan design and planning committee for the tunnel. The tunnel would connect the southern end of Spain's national high-speed train network with the northern end of the recently constructed Al Boraq high-speed line from Casablanca to Tangiers—the first high-speed rail line in Africa.
The proposed rail tunnel's length is 40km (30miles), 300m (1,000feet) deep,[10] and its construction would take 15 years. An earlier plan was to link the two continents via the narrowest part of the strait, but this idea was dismissed as the tunnel would be below sea level. For comparison, the currently deepest undersea tunnel, the Norwegian Ryfylke Tunnel, is below sea level. A tunnel deeper than Ryfylke is under construction, also in Norway; Rogfast will be 27km (17miles) long and 392m (1,286feet) deep, expected to be completed in 2028–29.
The construction of terminals, similar to the Eurotunnel Folkestone Terminal and Eurotunnel Calais Terminal at either end of the Channel Tunnel, might be required for transshipment of road vehicles.
Car ferries have long operated across the Strait of Gibraltar. they operate on these routes:[21]
The ferry traffic has an established base of customers, useful to calculate the number of users for a fixed link.
Web site: Website of the project of the fixed link through the Strait of Gibraltar. https://web.archive.org/web/20070516142231/http://www.secegsa.com/eng/index-eng.aspx. 16 May 2007. 3 February 2009.