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Transport in Denmark

Transport in Denmark is developed and modern.[clarification needed] The motorway network covers 1,111 km[1] while the railway network totals 2,667 km of operational track.[2] The Great Belt Fixed Link (opened in 1997) connecting the islands of Zealand and Funen and the New Little Belt Bridge (opened in 1970) connecting Funen and Jutland greatly improved the traffic flow across the country on both motorways and rail. The two largest airports of Copenhagen and Billund provide a variety of domestic and international connections, while ferries provide services to the Faroe Islands, Greenland, Iceland, Germany, Sweden, and Norway, as well as domestic routes servicing most Danish islands.

The Great Belt Fixed Link connecting the islands of Zealand and Funen across the Great Belt was opened in 1997

Air edit

 
Aalborg airport in the north of Jutland

In 2011, a total of appr. 28 million passengers used Danish airports.[3]

Copenhagen Airport is the largest airport in Scandinavia, handling approximately 29m passengers per year (2016). It is located at Kastrup, 8 km south-east of central Copenhagen. It is connected by train to Copenhagen Central Station and beyond as well as to Malmö and other towns in Sweden.

For the west of the country, the major airport is Billund (3m passengers in 2016) although both Aalborg (1.4m passengers in 2011) and Aarhus (591.000 passengers in 2011) have smaller airports with regular connections to Copenhagen.

List of airports edit

Denmark's main airports are:

  • Copenhagen Airport (CPH), Scandinavia's busiest passenger airport located at Kastrup to the south-east of Copenhagen city and handling over 29 million passengers a year.
  • Billund Airport (BLL), in central Jutland, one of Denmark's busiest cargo centres as well as a popular charter airline destination and an airport for regular flights serving 3 million passengers a year, mainly from the western part of the country.
  • Aalborg Airport (AAL), located 5 km northwest of Aalborg, is Denmark's third busiest airport serving around 1,4 million passengers a year in connections with 25 European destinations and one of Europes busiest domestic lines to Copenhagen.
  • Aarhus Airport (AAR), located 39 km northeast of Århus, serves some 540,000 passengers a year.

Other airports include:

  • Karup Airport (KRP) near Viborg in the west of Jutland, mainly serving Copenhagen with some 200,000 passengers a year.
  • Bornholm Airport (RNN) 5 km from the centre of Rønne in the southwest of the island of Bornholm, with several regular flights to Copenhagen a day.
  • Esbjerg Airport (EBJ), a small airport in the west of Jutland with regular flights to Aberdeen and Stavanger (although primarily serving North Sea Oilrigs).
  • Sønderborg Airport (SGD), in the very south of Jutland with connections to Copenhagen.
  • Roskilde Airport (RKE), 7 km southeast of Roskilde and some 38 km southwest of Copenhagen, serves mainly airtaxi and private business traffic.[4]

Sea edit

Being an island state with a long coastline and always close to the sea, maritime transport has always been important in Denmark. From the primitive dugouts of the Stone Age to the complex designs of the Viking ships in the Viking Age, often built to exactly facilitate large scale cargo and passenger transportation. Denmark also engaged in the large scale cargo freights and slave transports of the European colonization endeavours in the Middle Ages and operated several smaller colonies of its own across the globe by the means of seafaring.

Today Denmark's ports handle some 48 million passengers and 109 million tonnes of cargo per year.[5]

Passenger traffic edit

 
Rødbyhavn ferry terminal on Lolland

Passenger traffic is made up partly of ferry crossings within Denmark, partly of international ferry crossings and partly of cruise ship passengers. Some short ferry routes are being electrified[6] and several more may be eligible,[7] as in Norway.[8]

class=notpageimage|
Map of Denmark showing the locations of the major ports

Among the most important ports for passenger traffic (thousands of passengers per year in 2007) are:

In 2007, 288 cruise ships visited Copenhagen, rising to 376 in 2011 before returning to around 300 the following years. Around 800,000 cruise passengers and 200,000 crew visit Copenhagen each year.[9]

Cargo traffic edit

Among the most important ports for cargo traffic (millions of tonnes per year in 2007) are:

Waterways edit

Waterways have historically and traditionally been crucial to local transportation in Denmark proper. Especially the Gudenå river-system in central Jutland, has played an important role. The waterways were navigated by wooden barges and later on steamboats.[10] A few historical steamboats are still in operation, like the SS Hjejlen from 1861 at Silkeborg.

There is a 160 km natural canal through the shallow Limfjorden in northern Jutland, linking the North Sea to the Kattegat.

Many waterways has formerly been redirected and led through manmade canals in the 1900s, but mainly for agricultural purposes and not to facilitate transportation on any major scale. Several cities have manmade canals used for transportation and traffic purposes. Of special mention are the canals of Copenhagen and the Odense Canal, ferrying large numbers of both tourists and local citizens.[11]

Merchant marine edit

External image
  Traffic and protected areas around Denmark

Denmark has a large merchant fleet relative to its size. In 2018, the fleet surpassed 20 million gt as the government sought to repatriate Danish-owned tonnage registered abroad, with measures including removal of the registration fee.[12]

Denmark has created its own international register, called the Danish International Ship register (DIS), open to commercial vessels only. DIS ships do not have to meet Danish manning regulations.

Railways edit

 
Copenhagen Central Station with S-Trains.
 
Denmark railway network

The largest railway operator in Denmark is Danske Statsbaner (DSB) — Danish State Railways. Arriva operates some routes in Jutland, and several other smaller operators provide local services.

The total length of operational track is 3,476 km standard gauge, with 1,756 km electrified.[13]

The railway system is connected to Sweden by bridge in Copenhagen and ferry in Helsingør and Frederikshavn, by land to Germany in Padborg and ferry in Rødby and to Norway by ferry in Hirtshals.

Roads edit

The road network in 2017 totalled 74,558 km of paved road.[13] Motorways are toll-free except for the Great Belt Bridge joining Zealand and Funen and the Øresund Bridge linking Copenhagen to Malmö in Sweden.

Cycling edit

Bicycling in Denmark is a common and popular utilitarian and recreational activity. Bicycling infrastructure is a dominant feature of both city and countryside infrastructure, with bicycle paths and bicycle ways in many places and an extensive network of bicycle routes, extending more than 12,000 kilometres (7,500 mi) nationwide.[14] In comparison, Denmark's coastline is 7,314 kilometres (4,545 mi). As a unique feature, Denmark has a VIN-system for bicycles which is mandatory by law. Often bicycling and bicycle culture in Denmark is compared to the Netherlands as a bicycle-nation.

Pipelines edit

Figures in 2015:[13]

Crude oil
330 km
Petroleum products
578 km (2007)
Natural gas
1536 km

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Road network by type of road and time (2008). Statistics Denmark. Retrieved 24 March 2009.
  2. ^ Railway network 1 January by unit, railway system and time (2008). Statistics Denmark. Retrieved 24 March 2008.
  3. ^ Departing passengers from major manned, public airports by airport, type of transport and flight. Statistics Denmark. Retrieved 25 March 2009.
  4. ^ "Countrywise Codes". Airportcitycodes.com. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  5. ^ Call of vessels, passengers and throughput of goods in traffic ports by seaport and unit. Statistics Denmark. Retrieved 26 March 2009.
  6. ^ "Öresund Dry Docks to modernise HH Ferries' vessels". CruiseandFerry.net. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  7. ^ "Electrification of Denmark's ferry fleet" (PDF). W3.siemens.dk. (PDF) from the original on 11 September 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  8. ^ "Batterifergen har måttet stå over avganger. Nå er løsningen klar". Teknisk Ukeblad. 18 November 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  9. ^ "Copenhagen (Denmark)". CruiseMapper. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  10. ^ "The towpath along the Gudenåen River". 1001 stories of Denmark. The Heritage Agency of Denmark (Danish agency for Culture). Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  11. ^ World Canals - Denmark.. Retrieved 26 March 2009.
  12. ^ "Historic growth in Danish shipping registries continues". Ministry of Industry, Business and Financial Affairs. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  13. ^ a b c "Denmark", The World Factbook, Central Intelligence Agency, 4 November 2021, retrieved 17 November 2021
  14. ^ (in Danish). VisitDenmark. Archived from the original on 15 March 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2011.

Further reading edit

  • Peter, Bruce (2013). Ferries of Denmark / Danske Færger (in English and Danish). Ramsey, Isle of Man: Ferry Publications. ISBN 9781906608514.

External links edit

  • Public transportation Route Planner
  • Online Map, Address lookup
  • Copenhagen Airports
  • S-train and Danish train schedules
  • Copenhagenize - Copenhagen Bike Culture Blog
  • Metro information
  • All railway tracks
  • City of Copenhagen: City of Cyclists
  • Truck transport Denmark

transport, denmark, developed, modern, clarification, needed, motorway, network, covers, while, railway, network, totals, operational, track, great, belt, fixed, link, opened, 1997, connecting, islands, zealand, funen, little, belt, bridge, opened, 1970, conne. Transport in Denmark is developed and modern clarification needed The motorway network covers 1 111 km 1 while the railway network totals 2 667 km of operational track 2 The Great Belt Fixed Link opened in 1997 connecting the islands of Zealand and Funen and the New Little Belt Bridge opened in 1970 connecting Funen and Jutland greatly improved the traffic flow across the country on both motorways and rail The two largest airports of Copenhagen and Billund provide a variety of domestic and international connections while ferries provide services to the Faroe Islands Greenland Iceland Germany Sweden and Norway as well as domestic routes servicing most Danish islands The Great Belt Fixed Link connecting the islands of Zealand and Funen across the Great Belt was opened in 1997 Contents 1 Air 1 1 List of airports 2 Sea 2 1 Passenger traffic 2 2 Cargo traffic 2 3 Waterways 2 4 Merchant marine 3 Railways 4 Roads 5 Cycling 6 Pipelines 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksAir edit nbsp Aalborg airport in the north of Jutland In 2011 a total of appr 28 million passengers used Danish airports 3 Copenhagen Airport is the largest airport in Scandinavia handling approximately 29m passengers per year 2016 It is located at Kastrup 8 km south east of central Copenhagen It is connected by train to Copenhagen Central Station and beyond as well as to Malmo and other towns in Sweden For the west of the country the major airport is Billund 3m passengers in 2016 although both Aalborg 1 4m passengers in 2011 and Aarhus 591 000 passengers in 2011 have smaller airports with regular connections to Copenhagen List of airports edit Further information List of airports in Denmark and List of the largest airports in the Nordic countries Denmark s main airports are Copenhagen Airport CPH Scandinavia s busiest passenger airport located at Kastrup to the south east of Copenhagen city and handling over 29 million passengers a year Billund Airport BLL in central Jutland one of Denmark s busiest cargo centres as well as a popular charter airline destination and an airport for regular flights serving 3 million passengers a year mainly from the western part of the country Aalborg Airport AAL located 5 km northwest of Aalborg is Denmark s third busiest airport serving around 1 4 million passengers a year in connections with 25 European destinations and one of Europes busiest domestic lines to Copenhagen Aarhus Airport AAR located 39 km northeast of Arhus serves some 540 000 passengers a year Other airports include Karup Airport KRP near Viborg in the west of Jutland mainly serving Copenhagen with some 200 000 passengers a year Bornholm Airport RNN 5 km from the centre of Ronne in the southwest of the island of Bornholm with several regular flights to Copenhagen a day Esbjerg Airport EBJ a small airport in the west of Jutland with regular flights to Aberdeen and Stavanger although primarily serving North Sea Oilrigs Sonderborg Airport SGD in the very south of Jutland with connections to Copenhagen Roskilde Airport RKE 7 km southeast of Roskilde and some 38 km southwest of Copenhagen serves mainly airtaxi and private business traffic 4 Sea editBeing an island state with a long coastline and always close to the sea maritime transport has always been important in Denmark From the primitive dugouts of the Stone Age to the complex designs of the Viking ships in the Viking Age often built to exactly facilitate large scale cargo and passenger transportation Denmark also engaged in the large scale cargo freights and slave transports of the European colonization endeavours in the Middle Ages and operated several smaller colonies of its own across the globe by the means of seafaring Today Denmark s ports handle some 48 million passengers and 109 million tonnes of cargo per year 5 Passenger traffic edit nbsp Rodbyhavn ferry terminal on Lolland Passenger traffic is made up partly of ferry crossings within Denmark partly of international ferry crossings and partly of cruise ship passengers Some short ferry routes are being electrified 6 and several more may be eligible 7 as in Norway 8 nbsp nbsp Helsingor nbsp Rodbyhavn nbsp Frederikshavn nbsp Sjaellands Odde nbsp Esbjerg nbsp Gedser nbsp Aarhus nbsp Ronne nbsp Ebeltoft nbsp Copenhagenclass notpageimage Map of Denmark showing the locations of the major ports Among the most important ports for passenger traffic thousands of passengers per year in 2007 are Helsingor 10 967 Rodbyhavn 7 058 Frederikshavn 2 894 Sjaellands Odde 2 233 Esbjerg 1 827 Gedser 1 612 Aarhus 1 583 Ronne 1 522 Ebeltoft 962 Copenhagen 872 In 2007 288 cruise ships visited Copenhagen rising to 376 in 2011 before returning to around 300 the following years Around 800 000 cruise passengers and 200 000 crew visit Copenhagen each year 9 Cargo traffic edit Among the most important ports for cargo traffic millions of tonnes per year in 2007 are Fredericia 15 327 Aarhus 12 189 Copenhagen 7 379 Helsingor 4 480 Esbjerg 4 476 Kalundborg 3 714 Frederikshavn 3 200 Aalborg Portland 2 999 Aalborg 2 749 Odense 2 616 Waterways edit Waterways have historically and traditionally been crucial to local transportation in Denmark proper Especially the Gudena river system in central Jutland has played an important role The waterways were navigated by wooden barges and later on steamboats 10 A few historical steamboats are still in operation like the SS Hjejlen from 1861 at Silkeborg There is a 160 km natural canal through the shallow Limfjorden in northern Jutland linking the North Sea to the Kattegat Many waterways has formerly been redirected and led through manmade canals in the 1900s but mainly for agricultural purposes and not to facilitate transportation on any major scale Several cities have manmade canals used for transportation and traffic purposes Of special mention are the canals of Copenhagen and the Odense Canal ferrying large numbers of both tourists and local citizens 11 Merchant marine edit External image nbsp Traffic and protected areas around Denmark Denmark has a large merchant fleet relative to its size In 2018 the fleet surpassed 20 million gt as the government sought to repatriate Danish owned tonnage registered abroad with measures including removal of the registration fee 12 Denmark has created its own international register called the Danish International Ship register DIS open to commercial vessels only DIS ships do not have to meet Danish manning regulations Railways edit nbsp Copenhagen Central Station with S Trains nbsp Denmark railway network Main article Rail transport in Denmark The largest railway operator in Denmark is Danske Statsbaner DSB Danish State Railways Arriva operates some routes in Jutland and several other smaller operators provide local services The total length of operational track is 3 476 km standard gauge with 1 756 km electrified 13 The railway system is connected to Sweden by bridge in Copenhagen and ferry in Helsingor and Frederikshavn by land to Germany in Padborg and ferry in Rodby and to Norway by ferry in Hirtshals Roads editMain article Road traffic in Denmark Further information Motorways in Denmark The road network in 2017 totalled 74 558 km of paved road 13 Motorways are toll free except for the Great Belt Bridge joining Zealand and Funen and the Oresund Bridge linking Copenhagen to Malmo in Sweden nbsp Motorways in Denmark Cycling editMain article Cycling in Denmark Bicycling in Denmark is a common and popular utilitarian and recreational activity Bicycling infrastructure is a dominant feature of both city and countryside infrastructure with bicycle paths and bicycle ways in many places and an extensive network of bicycle routes extending more than 12 000 kilometres 7 500 mi nationwide 14 In comparison Denmark s coastline is 7 314 kilometres 4 545 mi As a unique feature Denmark has a VIN system for bicycles which is mandatory by law Often bicycling and bicycle culture in Denmark is compared to the Netherlands as a bicycle nation nbsp Bicycle rush hour in Copenhagen nbsp Heavily trafficked roads in the inner cities often have cycle lanes nbsp A bike road in central Aarhus nbsp A cross country bikeway route Pipelines editFigures in 2015 13 Crude oil 330 km Petroleum products 578 km 2007 Natural gas 1536 kmSee also editDenmark Road traffic in Denmark Overseas constituencies Transport in the Faroe Islands Transport in GreenlandReferences edit Road network by type of road and time 2008 Statistics Denmark Retrieved 24 March 2009 Railway network 1 January by unit railway system and time 2008 Statistics Denmark Retrieved 24 March 2008 Departing passengers from major manned public airports by airport type of transport and flight Statistics Denmark Retrieved 25 March 2009 Countrywise Codes Airportcitycodes com Retrieved 15 December 2017 Call of vessels passengers and throughput of goods in traffic ports by seaport and unit Statistics Denmark Retrieved 26 March 2009 Oresund Dry Docks to modernise HH Ferries vessels CruiseandFerry net Retrieved 1 February 2017 Electrification of Denmark s ferry fleet PDF W3 siemens dk Archived PDF from the original on 11 September 2017 Retrieved 15 December 2017 Batterifergen har mattet sta over avganger Na er losningen klar Teknisk Ukeblad 18 November 2016 Retrieved 19 November 2016 Copenhagen Denmark CruiseMapper Retrieved 1 February 2017 The towpath along the Gudenaen River 1001 stories of Denmark The Heritage Agency of Denmark Danish agency for Culture Retrieved 4 October 2014 World Canals Denmark Retrieved 26 March 2009 Historic growth in Danish shipping registries continues Ministry of Industry Business and Financial Affairs Retrieved 10 March 2019 a b c Denmark The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency 4 November 2021 retrieved 17 November 2021 Cykelruter og regioner in Danish VisitDenmark Archived from the original on 15 March 2012 Retrieved 16 August 2011 Further reading editPeter Bruce 2013 Ferries of Denmark Danske Faerger in English and Danish Ramsey Isle of Man Ferry Publications ISBN 9781906608514 External links editPublic transportation Route Planner Online Map Address lookup Copenhagen Airports S train and Danish train schedules Copenhagenize Copenhagen Bike Culture Blog Metro information All railway tracks City of Copenhagen City of Cyclists Truck transport Denmark Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Transport in Denmark amp oldid 1213310665, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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