£655m is now the price tag attached to Shetland’s clearest choice: keep patching an ageing ferry system, or test whether Shetland tunnels can stop Yell and Unst from being managed into further decline.
Shetland's £655m tunnel vote forces a choice between managed decline and permanent links
Shetland Islands council voted on Tuesday to investigate financing options for the first two subsea tunnels, which would connect Mainland to Yell, then Yell to Unst, according to Guardian World. The vote does not approve construction. It does something more politically useful for now: it moves the Shetland tunnels plan from civic aspiration into the harder arena of capital costs, tolls, government support and private finance.
The first two projects would cost about £655m and take at least eight years to complete. Councillors also backed the possibility of later tunnels to Bressay and Whalsay, while new ferries are proposed for Papa Stour and Skerries.
The council’s case is simple. Ferries still matter, but they no longer look sufficient for Yell and Unst. Islanders have spent years campaigning for fixed links to replace ageing and unreliable ferries after seeing families leave, businesses close and parents live away from home for work.
“We have no ‘do nothing’ options here. Ferries and tunnels are both needed to unlock the potential of Shetland, and both the Scottish and UK governments have a vested interest in helping that happen,” council leader Emma Macdonald said.
XOOMAR analysis: investigating finance is the right next step. Doing nothing would not freeze Shetland in place. It would allow the existing pressures, unreliable crossings, limited capacity, weather disruption and demographic decline, to keep compounding.
The numbers behind Shetland's Mainland to Yell and Unst tunnel ambitions
The proposed first phase is narrow but consequential: one tunnel from Mainland to Yell, then another from Yell to Unst. The wider concept could eventually stretch to four tunnels across the island network.
The cost split matters:
| Proposed link | Estimated build cost | Estimated operating cost |
|---|---|---|
| Mainland to Yell | about £352m | £90m over 60 years |
| Yell to Unst | about £300m | £72m |
Those figures put the total first-phase build cost at about £655m. The council says tolls could partly meet costs, and private investors could help finance and operate the tunnels.
The ferry alternative is not cheap stability. Shetland’s roll-on, roll-off ferries are more than 32 years old on average. They stop overnight, have limited capacity, face weather cancellations and carry rising repair and replacement costs. Staffing is also exposed: 50% of crew are aged 46 or over, and the service has struggled to recruit and retain workers.
The economic case for national help rests on Shetland’s role beyond its population size. The islands host the UK’s only space port at SaxaVord on Unst, which is due to host its first rocket launches later this year. Shetland also produces 22% of Scotland’s farmed salmon and 88% of its farmed mussels, while its trawlers land seafood valued at £147m.
That is why councillors want support from the Scottish and UK governments, potentially through the Scottish National Investment Bank or the national wealth fund.
Why ferries have become the weak link in Shetland's island economy
The strongest argument for Shetland tunnels is not speed. It is reliability.
Ferries turn routine movement into a planning risk. The source material points to limited capacity, no overnight service, staffing strain and cancellations in bad weather. For residents, that deepens insecurity and isolation. For businesses, it makes delivery schedules and workforce movement harder to control.
The demographic signal is already flashing. Official data cited by the council shows the population has fallen by 24% in the last 40 years. Macdonald’s argument is that fixed links can reverse that pattern, saying islands with fixed links “repopulate, enjoy economic growth and experience a reduction in their average age.”
That claim will now have to survive finance scrutiny. But the direction of pressure is clear. When families leave, businesses close and parents have to live away from home for work, transport is not a background service. It becomes a structural constraint on daily life.
This is where romantic ideas about island resilience fail. Resilience has limits when public infrastructure keeps making ordinary work, travel and business logistics harder than they need to be.
Faroes and Norway show why fixed links are the real benchmark
Shetlanders often look to the Faroe Islands and Norway, where tunnels have changed how islands connect to larger settlements and markets. The Faroes are the sharper comparison in the supplied material: its tunnel network includes the world’s only undersea roundabout and offers fixed links between islands that once depended on more fragile sea crossings.
A related BBC report says the Faroes’ 18 islands are connected by 23 tunnels, four of them subsea. One 7.1 mile (11.4km) tunnel reaches 187m below the waves and has halved driving time between Tórshavn and Klaksvik.
That comparison does not prove Shetland can copy the model. It shows what councillors are trying to buy: not a single transport upgrade, but a different settlement pattern.
XOOMAR analysis: the central question is no longer whether remote islands deserve modern links. It is whether Shetland can assemble a funding structure credible enough for national funders, lenders and residents who will live with the costs.
For readers tracking governance stress across our global coverage, this is a slow infrastructure test rather than the immediate shocks seen in stories such as Monaco Explosion Unleashes Manhunt After Backpack Blast or Trump Ally Seizes Colombia Election After 1-Point Win. The common thread is institutional capacity: can public bodies act before pressure turns into crisis?
Residents, councillors, taxpayers, and engineers won't judge the Shetland tunnels the same way
Residents on Yell and Unst are likely to judge the plan by lived reliability: fewer cancelled journeys, less timetable anxiety and stronger confidence that island life can support work and family commitments. The tunnel action groups frame the links as both social and economic infrastructure.
“These links will not only bridge geographical divides but also enhance the prosperity and wellbeing of our island communities,” said Alice Mathewson, a spokesperson for Yell and Unst tunnel action groups.
Councillors face a different test. They must defend a capital-heavy project while admitting Shetland cannot afford construction alone. The council’s strongest political line is that ferries also carry long-term costs, including ageing vessels, repairs, replacement needs and operational limits.
Taxpayers and ministers will look for proof that the tunnels do not simply shift local costs onto national balance sheets. The council’s argument will need to show lifetime value, not just local enthusiasm.
Engineers will have their own checklist. The supplied material confirms engineering consultants have costed the tunnels, but the next stage must make the risks legible: geology, construction method, maintenance, operating model and how toll revenue would work if private investors are involved.
How Shetland's tunnel plan could reshape island living and northern industry
Permanent links could change the practical geography of the northern isles. Unst would no longer sit behind two ferry dependencies from Mainland. Yell would become part of a fixed road chain rather than a ferry-linked midpoint.
For industry, the stakes are clearer than the population numbers suggest. SaxaVord Spaceport, aquaculture and seafood all depend on reliable movement of workers, goods and services. The Guardian’s figures, 22% of Scotland’s farmed salmon, 88% of farmed mussels and £147m in seafood landings, give ministers a harder reason to care.
There is also a public-service angle, but the evidence in the supplied reporting supports it only at a general level. Better links can make services easier to reach and staff movement less constrained. The article does not provide specific data on schools or health access, so those claims should not be overstated.
The gains may also be uneven. A fixed link can help island businesses reach customers, but it can also make it easier for Mainland-based providers to serve the islands. That is not an argument against tunnels. It is a warning that infrastructure alone does not guarantee balanced local growth.
The next phase for Shetland's subsea tunnels will be a funding stress test
The finance investigation is where the politics gets real. Cost estimates, phasing, toll assumptions and risk sharing will separate a credible Shetland tunnels programme from a popular but unfunded wish list.
The most likely pressure will be for staging. The Mainland to Yell tunnel has the larger estimated build cost at about £352m, but it is also the first fixed-link step toward Unst. Without that link, the wider network cannot function as planned.
The practical decision points are now visible:
- Business case: proving lifetime costs beat the ferry-heavy alternative.
- Government talks: securing Scottish and UK support.
- Finance model: testing borrowing, tolls, infrastructure funds and private capital.
- Delivery plan: turning an eight-year minimum timeline into a credible programme.
- Community consent: keeping islanders aligned as costs, routes and tolls become concrete.
If Shetland can prove the tunnels cut long-run transport costs while protecting communities facing population decline, national funders will find the project harder to dismiss. If the numbers depend too heavily on optimistic toll income or vague growth claims, the vote will be remembered as another milestone in a long campaign rather than the start of construction.
Impact Analysis
- The vote moves Shetland’s tunnel plan from aspiration into serious financing discussions.
- Yell and Unst face continued demographic and economic pressure if transport links remain unreliable.
- The £655m price tag means Scottish, UK government or private support may be central to whether the project happens.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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