
Italy approves plans for world's longest suspension bridge
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's coalition hailed the state-funded project as an economic boost for the impoverished south of Italy -- only for critics to warn that it risks turning into a financial black hole.
Italian politicians have for decades debated a bridge over the Strait of Messina, a narrow strip of water between the island of Sicily and the region of Calabria, at the toe of Italy's boot.
But ministers say Wednesday's approval by a government committee, CIPESS, is the furthest the project has ever got.
Advocates say the bridge, due for completion by 2032, is at the cutting edge of engineering, able to withstand high winds and earthquakes in a region that lies across two tectonic plates.
It has been designed with two railway lines in the middle and three lanes of traffic on either side, with a suspended span of 3.3 kilometres (2.05 miles) -- a world record -- stretching between two 400-metre (1,300 feet) high towers.
Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini, who is also responsible for transport and infrastructure, told reporters work could begin as soon as September or October.
He said the bridge and the associated new roads, railways and stations would act as a "development accelerator" for impoverished Sicily and Calabria, boosting economic growth and creating tens of thousands of jobs, many of them skilled.
Yet the project has sparked local protests over the environmental impact and the cost, with critics saying the money could be better spent elsewhere.
Nicola Fratoianni, an MP of the Greens and Left Alliance, slammed a "mega-project that will divert a huge amount of public resources" and "risks turning into a gigantic black hole".
The Italian Court of Auditors has criticised the extent of debt-laden state's investment in this one project in its assessment of the 2024 budget.
The centre-left Democratic Party warned that the project "tramples environmental, safety and European norms -- and common sense".
The public prosecutor of Messina also recently warned of the risk that organised crime would benefit from the project. Salvini on Wednesday insisted the government would do everything to prevent mafia infiltration.
NATO spending
The longest suspended bridge in the world is currently the 1915 Canakkale Bridge in Turkey, which has a main span of 2,023 kilometres (1,257 miles) between its towers and opened in 2022.
Many believe that Italy's ambitious project will never actually materialise, pointing to a long history of public works announced, financed, yet never completed in Italy.
The project has had several false starts, with the first plans drawn up more than 50 years ago.
Eurolink, a consortium led by Italian group Webuild, won the tender in 2006 only for the government to cancel it after the eurozone debt crisis.
The consortium remains the contractor on the revived project.
This time, Rome may have an added incentive to press ahead -- by classifying the cost of the bridge as defence spending.
Italy has agreed along with other NATO allies to massively increase its defence expenditure to five percent of GDP, at the demand of US President Donald Trump.
Of this, 1.5 percent can be spent on "defence-related" areas such as cybersecurity and infrastructure -- and Rome is hoping the Messina bridge will qualify, particularly as Sicily hosts a NATO base.
Currently the only way to cross the Messina Strait is by ferry, taking at least an hour by car and two on the train -- where individual carriages are loaded onto the ferry -- but the bridge aims to cut journey times to 10 and 15 minutes, respectively.
Meloni insisted Wednesday it was a "demonstration of Italy's willpower and technical expertise" that would "form the backbone of a faster and more modern nation".
© 2025 AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
20 hours ago
- France 24
Coventry's mettle tested by Russian Olympic debate, say former IOC figures
With just six months to go to the opening ceremony for the Milan-Cortina Winter Games the odds are that Russian athletes -- normally a Winter Games superpower -- will have to compete under a neutral banner, owing to the country breaching the Olympic Charter. The IOC excluded the Russian NOC after it had placed under its authority several sports organisations from Ukrainian regions that Russian forces now occupy. That move came after President Vladimir Putin -- not for the first time in his country's turbulent relationship with the IOC -- broke the Olympic Truce when he launched the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. When the IOC under Thomas Bach -- and with Coventry a member of the Executive Committee -- permitted Russian athletes to compete as neutrals at the Paris Summer Olympics last year, some federations took a far harsher line. World Athletics barred all athletes from Russia and its allies Belarus from its competitions, as did other federations. The scenario is no different for winter sports, with the International Ski Federation (FIS), which is responsible for more than half the Olympic medal events, biathlon and luge taking a similar stance, though figure skating has not followed suit. Michael Payne, a former head of IOC marketing, told AFP there is "no question that Russia at some stage has to be brought back in from the cold" -- but the 2026 Winter Games will come too soon. "Kirsty Coventry is in the spotlight, everyone is watching everyone," he said. "There will be strong views and opinions no matter what decision you take. You will have various politicians using that decision to make a point, (and it) probably won't always be complimentary. "You are walking on thin ice. I think the right thing is to say you cannot rush this, you cannot blindside different stakeholders and politicians. "The political challenges facing a new IOC president was always going to be a baptism of fire." 'Complex problems' Payne said Russia was the "elephant in the room" for all of Bach's 12-year tenure, from the two invasions of Ukraine to the state-sponsored doping scandal at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics. The 67-year-old Irishman says the challenge for Coventry is that politicians are seeking "to weaponise the sports agenda" once again having largely stayed away during earlier eras, such as that of Juan Antonio Samaranch's tenure from 1980-2001. "One of Samaranch's great achievements was to bury the boycott agenda and for the better part of three decades or more politicians generally left sport alone," said Payne, who is credited with overhauling the IOC's brand and finances through sponsorship during Samaranch's reign. "Under Bach, with the Russia/Ukraine agenda, politics re-entered it and navigating an ever more complicated global political environment and keeping sport out of the crossfire is going to tax any leader. "A new leader is going to have their hands full." Another former IOC marketing executive, Terrence Burns, knows Russia well having first worked there in 1992 as Delta Air Lines' country marketing manager for the entity then known as the Commonwealth of Independent States. "There's no shortcut back in," Burns told AFP, adding that Russia "has never really owned up to any of it". "There's been no admission, no accountability. Zero," the American said. "That leaves the IOC in a tough but manageable spot. "If Russia wants back in, it's going to have to show it's willing to change." Burns, who later played a key role in five successful Olympic bid city campaigns, argued however that in the end Russia is integral to the Olympics. "The Olympics need Russia at the Games, just as they need the USA, China, etc," said Burns. "The true Olympic thesis is 'we all belong, or no one does.' That works fine in theory, speeches, and marketing campaigns. "Translating it into the real geopolitical world is a hell of a lot harder than it looks." Burns believes the Russians should not expect a speedy return. "People always want simple answers for complex problems," he said. "But the IOC cannot afford simplistic solutions because the universality that it espouses may well be the last, truly global theology upon all humanity can agree.


France 24
a day ago
- France 24
'Highest tariffs since Great Depression': In 1930's, trade plummeted and global depression deepened
04:25 07/08/2025 'Plastic pollution really begins when we're making plastics and extracting oil, gas from the ground' Environment 07/08/2025 EU faces major export decline amid sluggish growth in key member states Americas 07/08/2025 US begins collecting Trump's new global tariffs Americas 06/08/2025 Failing to tackle climate change will mean more wildfires ahead Environment 06/08/2025 Italy approves $15.5B plan for longest suspension bridge to Sicily Europe 06/08/2025 Nuclear weapons states no longer respect 'legal commitment to non-proliferation treaty' Asia / Pacific 06/08/2025 'The memories of the horrors of nuclear war and radiation seem to be lost on today's leaders' Asia / Pacific 06/08/2025 US envoy Witkoff meets Putin as Trump's sanctions deadline nears Europe


France 24
2 days ago
- France 24
Italy gives final go-ahead for landmark Sicily bridge project
Italy's government gave final approval on Wednesday to the construction of what will be the world's longest single-span bridge, linking Sicily to the mainland, despite environmental, financial and other concerns that have delayed it for decades. The 3.7-kilometre (2.3-mile) structure, set to break the record currently held by Turkey's Canakkale Bridge across the Dardanelles, has been under discussion since at least the late 1960s as a tool to develop Italy's poorer south.