Finland invests in future arctic rail link to Norwegian Sea

Freight cars carrying ore waiting to be unloaded at Narvik harbour. (Toni Määttä / Yle)

Finland is under pressure to switch its rail to the standard European gauge. In the first phase, a planned train line is to run between Kemi and Haparanda, Sweden.

Planning for a rail connection from Kemi to the port of Narvik in northern Norway will begin this year, the government decided in mid-term budget framework talks on Wednesday. It sees the train connection to Narvik as important for security of supply in times of crisis.

In the first phase, a standard European-gauge railway will be built between Kemi, Tornio, and the neighbouring Swedish town of Haparanda, a distance of some 30km.

At present, seamless cross-border rail traffic is not possible because Finnish tracks are nine centimetres wider than European standard tracks. Like Estonia, it still uses a width commonly used in the nineteenth century, referred to as the “Russian gauge”.

There is also a long-term plan for a rail link between the Swedish mining town of Kiruna and Kolari in Finnish Lapland. (Maiju Hakalahti / Yle)

This week, the government of Prime Minister Petteri Orpo (NCP) earmarked 20 million euros for an initial track gauge study.

Costly, long-term project

Minister of Transport Lulu Ranne (Finns) described the transition to a new track gauge between Haparanda and Kemi as the first step in a long-term project.

Ranne said that the European Commission has pressured Finland to move toward changing its track gauge, which would be a hugely expensive long-term project.

“The European Commission, Nato and the Finnish Defence Forces have made assessments of the most urgent major European military mobility project. It is this,” she declared.

The EU’s TEN-T Regulation, which enters into force this summer, includes requirements for the study and planning of the transition to the standard 1,435 mm track gauge in countries with different track gauges. Finland now uses a 1,524 mm track gauge, which dates back to the nineteenth century.

Narrower-gauge tracks planned to Oulu and Rovaniemi

The Finnish Transport Infrastructure Agency (FTIA) is planning a narrower-gauge rail line first to Kemi and in the future also to the major northern city of Oulu and the village of Misi in Rovaniemi, near a Defence Forces depot and shooting range. On the Swedish side, existing tracks already connect Haparanda with Narvik via the Swedish mining towns of Kiruna and Gällivare.

According to a preliminary Transport Ministry estimate, modifying the track as far as Oulu would cost more than 1.5 billion euros.

According to Ranne, more specific details will be revealed once the planning process gets underway.

“This is planning money for a few years. I would say that there are plenty of gauge-switching plans for the whole of Northern Finland into the 2030s,” Ranne said.

According to Ranne, Finland has been working on the issue in partnership with authorities in Nato ally countries Sweden and Norway.

The icebreaker Sampo is a tourist attraction in Kemi’s Veitsiluoto harbour. (Juuso Stoor / Yle)

A uniform track gauge would be decisive for national defence. For example, Nato could transport equipment to Finland by rail. However, Ranne noted that track plans are not just a security issue.

“A project of this scale, which boosts smooth transport, accessibility and operating conditions for business, is also a strong growth measure,” she argued.

Ranne predicted that rail overhaul projects would have a significant employment impact in Lapland and Northern Finland.

Rail bottleneck

Lapland Regional Governor Hannu Takkula hopes that the track work will begin promptly.

“The Narvik rail connection is part of our regional plan. The connection is important for security of supply,” said Takkula, a former Centre Party MP and MEP.

Ari Mure, deputy commander of the Lapland Jaeger Brigade of the Finnish Defence Forces, said that the northern rail connection is currently a real bottleneck.

“Now nothing can cross the border without special arrangements,” he told Yle.

Mure pointed out that compatible rail connections are crucial in transporting heavy military equipment, especially in crisis situations.

Related stories from around the North:

Canada: Transport issues delay school portables to Colville Lake, N.W.T., says gov’t, CBC News

Finland: Rovaniemi airport in Arctic Finland to get major expansion as passenger numbers surge, Yle News

Russia: Dense sea ice in the High Arctic could threaten shipping, The Independent Barents Observer

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