Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Transport |
Founded | 1998 |
Headquarters | , Denmark |
Number of locations | Two routes |
Area served | Baltic Sea |
Services | Ferries |
477 million EUR (2018) | |
Owner | First Sentier Investors Hermes Investment Management 3i |
Subsidiaries | Scandlines Deutschland, Scandlines Danmark |
Website | Official website |
Scandlines is a ferry company that operates the Rødby–Puttgarden and Gedser–Rostock ferry routes between Denmark and Germany.
Scandlines owns 7 ferries, 6 of which are hybrid ferries, making Scandlines the owner of the world's largest fleet of hybrid ferries.[1]
In a normal year, Scandlines has over 41,500 departures, 7 million passengers, 1.7 million passenger cars and approx. 700,000 freight units on its two routes.
Scandlines has two subsidiaries, Scandlines Danmark ApS and Scandlines Deutschland GmbH, which operate in the two main countries.
Scandlines expects to continue operating on the Rødby–Puttgarden route despite the planned completion of the Fehmarn Belt tunnel in 2029.[2]
In 1903, the first railway ferry sailed between Gedser in Denmark and Warnemünde in Germany, where De Danske Statsbaner, DSB, operated the route from the Danish side in partnership with a state-owned German shipping company.
A second service, the 'bird's flight line' (die Vogelfluglinie in German) between Rødby and Puttgarden was added in 1963, creating a direct route between Copenhagen and Hamburg.
The company was separated from DSB in 1995, and transformed into an independent limited company called DSB Rederi, which was, in turn, rebranded Scandlines in 1997. (The Scandlines brand had already been in use since 1991 on the Helsingør–Helsingborg ferry route[3]) In 1998, the two shipping company partners, Danish Scandlines and German DFO, merged into the company Scandlines, owned by the Danish Ministry of Transport and Deutsche Bahn.
Scandlines was privatized in 2007, and sold to the British infrastructure fund 3i, the German investment company Allianz Capital and the shipping company Deutsche Seereederei.
Between 1999 and 2015, part of Scandlines' ferry routes were sold, including Aarhus-Kalundborg to Molslinjen, and Helsingør-Helsingborg to ForSea Ferries.
Today, Scandlines is owned by a consortium consisting of the three infrastructure funds, First Sentier Investors, 3i and Federated Hermes.[4]
The main focus is on the two routes Gedser-Rostock and Rødby-Puttgarden.
The top management consists of CEO and COO Michael Guldmann Petersen and CFO Jesper Mikkelsen Heilbuth
The German part of the organization also has two directors: Heiko Kähler and Gerald Lefold, who are responsible for the day-to-day management of Scandlines' German companies.
Scandlines operates two ferry routes between Denmark and Germany.
Scandlines has six hybrid ferries and one freight ferry. In 2022, two ferries had a rotor sail mounted.[5]
Scandlines' ferries on Rødby-Puttgarden:
Scandlines' ferries on Gedser-Rostock:
Name | Built | Tonnage | Passengers | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Berlin | 2012 | 22.319 | 1.300 | Hybrid and rotor sail | Berlin before rotor sail |
Copenhagen | 2012 | 22.319 | 1.300 | Hybrid and rotor sail |
Freight ferry
Name | Built | Tonnage | Passengers | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kronprins Frederik | 1981 | 16.071 | 1400 | Freight & Replacement |
|
Futura | 2024 | TBD | 140 | E-Ferry Freight |
[6][7] |
In November 2021, it was announced that the company has ordered a battery-electric ferry for the Puttgarden-Rødby route from Cemre Shipyard. The new vessel is due to enter service in 2024 and will have two-deck loading alongside a freight capacity of 66 HGVs, or some 1200 lane metres.[8]
Scandlines owns the harbours areas in Rødby, Gedser and Puttgarden and rents an area in the harbour of Rostock.[9]