Sakhalin Tunnel


The Sakhalin Tunnel is an incomplete and currently postponed construction project, which after completion would connect the island of Sakhalin with mainland Russia via a tunnel of approximately under the Nevelskoy Strait. On January 16, 2009, it was suggested by the Russian government the link could be completed with a bridge, rather than tunnel.

History

Early proposals and planning

The concept of a tunnel under the Nevelskoy Strait has existed since the 19th century, although it was never seriously pursued due to economic reasons. Studies into the feasibility of the project were first undertaken by the Soviet Union in the late 1930s, although World War II made progress at this time impossible. Joseph Stalin later announced in 1950 his intention to build a railway link to Sakhalin, either via rail ferry, a causeway, or a tunnel. A decision to construct a tunnel was announced by the Soviet government on May 5, 1950, along with a rail ferry link to serve as a temporary solution. The project was intended primarily to serve a military purpose, allowing better connection between Sakhalin and the mainland for sections of the Red Army stationed on the island.

Construction

The construction of the railway connection from Selikhino near Komsomolsk-on-Amur to the intended mainland tunnel portal at Cape Lazarev was assigned to the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs, with the Ministry of Transport in charge of the tunnel itself. In 1952, the project was transferred to the full management of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
The planned route on Sakhalin was intended to run from Cape Pogibi, where the tunnel should resurface, to the then northern terminus of the Sakhalin rail network at Pobedino, north of Smirnykh. The length of the tunnel between Cape Pogibi and Cape Lasarev was planned to be around. On the mainland, a rail line was to be constructed to the railway connecting Komsomolsk-on-Amur with Sovetskaya Gavan, now a section of the Baikal-Amur Mainline.
The project was planned for completion by the end of 1953 and to be in full operation by the end of 1955. Annual goods traffic on the line was projected to reach four million tonnes.
The project included three separate constructions—mainland and island railway links, connecting with the rest of railroad network and tunnel itself. Railway characteristics were very poor; in fact, it was a temporary railway, which was to be followed by capital rebuilding after construction.
Tunnel works were a different story. It was to be constructed by military engineers and Metrostroy tunnel specialists.
After the death of Stalin, work on the project stopped, with the tunnel allegedly almost halfway across the straits, although later investigation has shown that just two shafts with depth about 55 meters, a diameter is about 9 meters, the trunk is concreted and lined with cast-iron tubing, fastened to each other by twelve bolts was built. While the reasons for cancellation of the project are not fully clear, some sources have indicated that because of numerous amnesties granted to prisoners after Stalin's death, there was no longer the required workforce. Tunnel workers waited eight months after cancellation, but without linking railways, the tunnel had no purpose.

Completed sections of the project

Around of track along the right bank of the Amur River from Selikhino to Chyorny Mys was completed, although this was still well short of the planned tunnel entrance at Cape Lazarev. The Selikhino-Chyorny Mys railway was later used for transport of lumber by the Soviet forestry industry, but was closed in the 1990s and the track has been largely dismantled.
Remains of the tunnel entrance are still visible around Cape Lazarev. No new track was built on Sakhalin, although preparatory earthworks on the planned route were used in the construction of a road from Nysh to Pogibi.

Current operations and future prospects

Since 1973, a train ferry has connected Vanino with the town of Kholmsk on Sakhalin.
Even after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, there have been calls from politicians for a revival of the project, although there have been concerns that its cost would outweigh the benefits. However, there have been signs that the link is under serious consideration, including an announcement of support from Russian President Dimitry Medvedev in November 2008. The project is proposed to be completed by 2030.
New plans would see the connection in Sakhalin at Nogliki, which has in the meantime been connected to the island's rail network. Work is under way to convert the island's narrow-gauge rail system, a legacy of the previous Japanese administration of the southern half of the island, to the broader Russian standard gauge.
There have also been proposals to connect the southern tip of Sakhalin to the Japanese island of Hokkaido via a bridge or tunnel, providing a direct land transport link for container traffic from Japan to the Asian mainland and Europe.
On January 16, 2009, Vice-Minister of Transport Andrey Nedosekov confirmed that proposals for a Sakhalin–Hokkaido Tunnel were being considered. The proposal was for a bridge rather than a tunnel. Current planning suggests that a tunnel would be long, while a bridge would be long. The Russian government has now invited proposals from Japanese companies. The invitation to Japanese companies to bid to become consortium members of a wide array of Russian rail infrastructure work, particularly the Sakhalin Tunnel to the Russian mainland, could be taken as a nod towards future rail cooperation between Russia and Japan.
In July 2018, Russia's president Vladimir Putin commissioned an analysis of a proposal to build a bridge from the Russian mainland to Sakhalin. Putin said that the project was very important for Sakhalin residents and would be a major factor in encouraging people to remain in the region. It would also boost the development of Khabarovsk Territory. He said that he had instructed the government to analyze this matter, particularly its economic aspects.