A delegation of Scottish MPs has visited the Faroe islands to learn how its undersea tunnel system could benefit the Shetland Islands.
As The Times UK reports, the delegation was keen to study the 21-mile network of four undersea tunnels built at a cost of over 416 million euros on the Faroes.
The tunnels include what is believed to be the world’s first submarine roundabout, and a 5G connection credited with helping to revitalise the economy of the 18 islands.
The Shetland Islands, 230 miles to the south east, is contemplating building a tunnel system of its own, the newspaper reports.
The tunnels were excavated between 2000 and 2022, and have not only cut journey times between some of the Faroe islands by up to 80 per cent but also made it possible to travel in even the roughest weather.
The tunnel system connects about 90 per cent of the 56,000 people who live on the Faroe Islands.
The cost was largely financed by borrowing, which is being repaid through a system of tolls.
The Times UK says the underwater tunnel from Streymoy to Eysturoy, the second largest island, has become a tourist attraction in its own right because of the roundabout, nicknamed the “jellyfish”.
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