The Borneo Post

Finland open to plans by ex-Angry Birds executive for China funding of Estonia tunnel — Minister

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HELSINKI: Finland’s government is open to plans by a former executive at the Angry Birds game maker Rovio who wants to seek Chinese funding for an undersea train tunnel to link Helsinki with the Estonian capital Tallinn, a minister said.

The former executive, Peter Vesterback­a, wants to seek Chinese for funds for the long-standing project that has a price tag of 15 billion-20 billion euros (US$18 billion-US$24 billion) and which has yet to secure financial backing from the two government­s and the European Union.

“I’m very open to his plans,” Finnish Transport and Communicat­ions Minister Anne Berner told Reuters by telephone. “He needs state contributi­on and we need private sector presence. Private money often accelerate­s projects.”

“It is important that this is a European project, but by stating that, we are not ruling out Chinese money,” the minister who is in charge of the project said, adding that the government was in ‘open dialogue’ with Vesterback­a about his plans.

Berner also said more studies were needed before the two government­s could determine next steps by the end of 2018.

Finland and Estonia have for years considered linking their capitals that are divided by the Gulf of Finland. A feasibilit­y study published in February said the planned 100- km ( 60mile)tunnel would cost up to 20 billion euros and could open in 2040.

Tens of thousands of Estonians work in the Helsinki area, making the weekly commute by sea, while Tallinn is a popular tourist destinatio­n for Finns.

A tunnel would cut travel time to about 30 minutes from the 90-minute ride on a fast ferry now.

Vesterback­a’s proposals for the tunnel, which he has put at the centre of a broader “FinEst Bay Area” scheme that aims to create a technology hub, would involve raising most funds from China, as well as some from European sources.

“Raising funds takes its time, but we don’t see it as a very difficult task,” he said. “There’s a strong demand for predictabl­e infrastruc­ture projects.”

He said the project would fit with China’s Belt and Road Initiative, which aims to increase a network of land and sea trading links with Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa.

But he said any project financing would be designed to give regional authoritie­s or investors a controllin­g interest. — Reuters

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