Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure

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Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure
- BMVI -

logo
State level Federation
position supreme federal authority
founding September 20, 1949
Headquarters BerlinBerlin Berlin
Authority management Andreas Scheuer ( CSU )
Servants circa 1245
Budget volume EUR 29.29 billion (2019)
Web presence www.bmvi.de
Andreas Scheuer (CSU), Federal Minister for Transport and Digital Infrastructure
First office of the BMVI in Berlin, Invalidenstrasse
Second office of the BMVI in Bonn, Robert-Schuman-Platz

The Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure ( BMVI for short ) is a supreme federal authority in the Federal Republic of Germany . It has its headquarters or first office in Berlin , its second - more staffed office - in the federal city of Bonn .

Around 1245 employees work in the ministry, including around 693 in Bonn, around 552 in Berlin and up to 15 abroad. At the top is the Federal Minister for Transport and Digital Infrastructure. He is supported in his tasks by two parliamentary state secretaries (each member of the German Bundestag ) and civil servant state secretaries . The Ministry is subordinate to 63 authorities with around 25,000 employees.

The BMVI was created by renaming from the Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Development (BMVBS) by virtue of an organizational decree on December 17, 2013 with the appointment of the Merkel III cabinet .

History and seat

The Federal Ministry of Transport was established in 1949. It was located in Bonn in the building of the Rhineland Chamber of Agriculture between 1949 and 1960 , then in the Sparkasse building on Bonn's Friedensplatz until 1974 , and from 1951 also on the Bad Godesberger Viktorshöhe . The ministry had more than 28 addresses over the years and in 1976 was spread across seven different locations. From 1979 to 1989 the ministry was housed at Kennedyallee 64-70 in Bonn .

From 1989 the Federal Ministry of Transport had its headquarters on Robert-Schuman-Platz in the Hochkreuz district of Bonn in a new building that was built from 1986 to 1989 next to the then Federal Ministry of Post and Telecommunications . In May 1980, the Munich architects Wilhelm Deiß and Heribert Bargou won the implementation competition with their building design. The implementation planning and construction management was transferred to the Düsseldorf office Eller Meier Walter in 1985.

Since the government moved from Bonn to Berlin in 1999, the second office of the ministry has been located in the building. Since then, the first office has been in Berlin at Invalidenstrasse 44 in a building that was built by August Tiede in 1878 for the Prussian Geological State Institute and expanded in two construction phases according to plans by the Swiss architect Max Dudler .

By the organizational decree of the Federal Chancellor of October 27, 1998, the Federal Ministry of Transport and the Federal Ministry of Regional Planning, Building and Urban Development were merged and the Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Housing (BMVBW) was formed. In 2005 it was renamed the Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Development (BMVBS). With the appointment of the Merkel III cabinet , the ministry was renamed the Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure (BMVI) on December 17, 2013 . The area of construction including urban development was affiliated to the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety and, in March 2018, to the Federal Ministry of the Interior, Building and Home Affairs (BMI).

tasks

The ministry, together with its subordinate authorities, performs the departmental tasks in the areas relating to the mobility of people, goods and data.

Responsibility extends to the federal transport infrastructure ( federal highways , railway networks , waterways and airways) and the nationwide availability of modern broadband networks . The range of tasks includes the legal order and ensuring the safety of the respective modes of transport as well as the planning and financing of investments for the maintenance and expansion of infrastructures.

The main task in the field of digital infrastructure is a comprehensive supply of fast Internet (transmission speed of at least 50 Mbit / s). Another task is the modernization of mobility ( alternative drives and fuels , networking of vehicles and infrastructure, intelligent transport systems and automated mobility). This also includes the establishment of a digital motorway test field for testing innovative vehicle technologies.

construction

The ministry is divided into nine departments , each with one to three sub-departments , which report to the minister himself or to the state secretaries:

minister

  • Department of Management, Communication

State Secretary Dr. Güntner

  • Central Department
  • Federal trunk roads department
  • Road Traffic Department
  • Railways Department

State Secretary Dr. Zieschang

  • Policy Department
  • Digital Society Department
  • Aviation Department
  • Department of Waterways, Shipping

Awards

In 2018/2019, the Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure (together with DB Cargo and VTG AG ) was awarded the Privatbahn Magazin innovation prize for developing the “innovative freight wagon” .

Budget

The ministry manages a budget of 31.048 billion euros (target for 2020).

According to the government draft of the 2017 federal budget and the 2016 to 2020 financial plan , this sum should develop as follows:

year Total
(in million euros)
2015 (actual) 23,193
2016 (target) 24,572
2017 (government draft) 26,821
2018 ( financial plan ) 27,395
2019 (financial plan) 27,417
2020 (financial plan) 25,255

Since the ministry has been under the leadership of Bavarian ministers (Peter Ramsauer, 2009), a disproportionately large amount of funds has been flowing to Bavaria.

Federal Minister since 1949

Andreas Scheuer Christian Schmidt Alexander Dobrindt Peter Ramsauer Wolfgang Tiefensee Manfred Stolpe Kurt Bodewig Reinhard Klimmt Franz Müntefering Matthias Wissmann Günther Krause Friedrich Zimmermann Jürgen Warnke Werner Dollinger Volker Hauff Kurt Gscheidle Lauritz Lauritzen Georg Leber Hans-Christoph Seebohm
No. Surname image Life dates Political party Beginning of the term of office Term expires Term of office
in days
Cabinet (s)
Federal Minister for Transport
1 Hans-Christoph Seebohm KAS-Seebohm, Hans-Christoph-Bild-628-1.jpg 1903-1967 DP (until 1960)
CDU (from 1960)
September 20, 1949 November 30, 1966 6219 Adenauer I
Adenauer II
Adenauer III
Adenauer IV
Adenauer V
Erhard I
Erhard II
2 Georg Leber Federal archive B 145 Bild-F039419-0005, Hanover, SPD federal party conference, Leber.jpg 1920-2012 SPD 1st December 1966 July 7, 1972 2045 Kiesinger
Brandt I.
3 Lauritz Lauritzen De Duitse minister van verkeer Lauritzen spreekt tijdens de opening, inventory number 926-8231.jpg 1910-1980 SPD July 7, 1972 May 16, 1974 678 Brandt I
Brandt II
4th Kurt Gscheidle Kurt Gscheidle.jpeg 1924-2003 SPD May 16, 1974 November 4th 1980 2364 Schmidt I
Schmidt II
5 Volker Hauff Volker hauff 2008.jpg * 1940 SPD November 6, 1980 October 1, 1982 694 Schmidt III
6th Werner Dollinger Federal archive B 145 Bild-F073613-0024, Mainz, CDU federal party conference, Dollinger.jpg 1918-2008 CSU 4th October 1982 March 12, 1987 1620 Kohl I
Kohl II
7th Jürgen Warnke Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F073643-0004, Bonn, Warnke with President of Guatemala.jpg 1932-2013 CSU March 12, 1987 April 21, 1989 771 Kohl III
8th Friedrich Zimmermann Federal archive B 145 Bild-F085285-0011a, Bonn Friedrich Zimmermann.jpg 1925-2012 CSU April 21, 1989 January 18, 1991 637 Kohl III
9 Günther Krause Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1990-0711-300, Günther Krause (CDU) .jpg * 1953 CDU January 18, 1991 May 13, 1993 846 Kohl IV
10 Matthias Wissmann IAA 2017 (1Y7A1650) .jpg * 1949 CDU May 13, 1993 October 26, 1998 1992 Kohl IV
Kohl V
Federal Minister for Transport, Building and Housing
11/16 Franz Müntefering FranzMüntefering mw1.jpg * 1940 SPD October 27, 1998 September 29, 1999 337 Schröder I
12/17 Reinhard Klektiven ReinhardKlektivenP1060301.jpg * 1942 SPD September 29, 1999 November 16, 2000 383 Schröder I
13/18 Kurt Bodewig Kurt Bodewig (MP) Germany BSPC 18 Nyborg Denmark 2009-08-31 (1) .jpg * 1955 SPD November 20, 2000 October 22, 2002 701 Schröder I
14/19 Manfred Stolpe Manfred Stolpe.JPG 1936-2019 SPD October 22, 2002 November 22, 2005 1127 Schröder II
Federal Minister for Transport, Building and Urban Development
15/20 Wolfgang Tiefensee Wolfgang Tiefensee.jpg * 1955 SPD November 22, 2005 October 28, 2009 1436 Merkel I
16/21 Peter Ramsauer Peter Ramsauer.jpg * 1954 CSU October 28, 2009 17th December 2013 1511 Merkel II
Federal Minister for Transport and Digital Infrastructure
17th Alexander Dobrindt Signing of the coalition agreement for the 18th electoral term of the Bundestag (Martin Rulsch) 104.jpg * 1970 CSU 17th December 2013 October 24, 2017 1407 Merkel III
- Christian Schmidt
(acting)
Christian Schmidt (2014) .jpg
* 1957 CSU October 24, 2017 March 14, 2018 141 Merkel III
18th Andreas Scheuer Scheuer Andreas 2017 by Studio Weichselbaumer.jpg * 1974 CSU March 14, 2018 in office 895 Merkel IV

Parliamentary State Secretaries

Federal Ministry of Transport

Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Housing

Federal Ministry of Traffic, Construction and City Development

Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure

Official State Secretaries

Federal Ministry of Transport

Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Housing

Federal Ministry of Traffic, Construction and City Development

Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure

See also

Web links

Commons : Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Bundeshaushalt.de: www.Bundeshaushalt.de. Retrieved August 30, 2019 .
  2. ↑ List of Abbreviations. (PDF; 49 kB) Abbreviations for the constitutional organs, the highest federal authorities and the highest federal courts. In: bund.de. Federal Office of Administration (BVA), accessed on August 14, 2016 .
  3. BMVI - family-friendly employer. Retrieved on December 12, 2017 (in an answer from Parliamentary State Secretary Enak Ferlemann of May 28, 2019 to the written question from MP Sabine Leidig, the total number of employees in the BMVI (civil servants and salaried employees, without differentiating between the offices in Berlin and Bonn) was included 1351).
  4. The Ministry introduces itself. In: bmvi.de. Archived from the original on February 1, 2014 ; accessed on January 21, 2014 .
  5. Business areas. In: bmvi.de. Archived from the original on February 1, 2014 ; accessed on January 21, 2014 .
  6. Entry on Path of Democracy
  7. ^ Horst Heldmann: 50 years of the Ministry of Transport in Bonn . In: International Transport . September 1999, p. 406-407 .
  8. ^ The Federal Minister for Transport together with the Federal Minister for Regional Planning, Building and Urban Development (ed.): Federal Ministry for Transport Bonn. New building on Robert-Schuman-Platz (=  picture documentation of the Federal Ministry for Regional Planning, Building and Urban Development ). Bonn September 1989 (36 pages).
  9. Addresses and directions in Berlin and Bonn. (No longer available online.) In: Internet presence. Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure, archived from the original on July 13, 2016 ; accessed on July 13, 2016 .
  10. ^ Prussian Geological State Institute - history and service building. In: Internet presence. K. Schuberth, accessed December 30, 2016 .
  11. Historic Berlin office. In: Internet presence. Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure, accessed on January 18, 2017 .
  12. ^ Heinz Hoffmann (editor): The Federal Ministries 1949–1999. Designations, official abbreviations, responsibilities, organizational structure, management personnel (=  materials from the Federal Archives . Issue 8). Wirtschaftsverlag NW GmbH, Bremerhaven 2003, ISBN 3-86509-075-3 , p. 370 .
  13. The Ministry introduces itself. The departments and their tasks. In: BMVI website. Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure, 2017, accessed on December 27, 2017 .
  14. Organization chart. In: BMVI website. Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure, July 6, 2020, accessed on July 5, 2020 .
  15. Dr. Jens Klocksin from the BMVI presented the innovation prize of the Privatbahn Magazin to the guests at the “Innovative Freight Cars” symposium in Berlin. In: Twitter.com. Privatbahn Magazin Redaktion, April 12, 2019, accessed on July 31, 2020 .
  16. Law on the adoption of the federal budget for the budget year 2020 (Budget Law 2020). (PDF; 31.4 MB) In: bundeshaushalt-info.de. Federal Ministry of Finance (BMF), December 21, 2019, p. 18 , accessed on August 12, 2020 .
  17. ^ Government draft of the federal budget 2017 and financial plan 2016 to 2020. (PDF; 103 kB) In: bundesfinanzministerium.de. Federal Ministry of Finance (BMF), July 6, 2016, accessed on July 7, 2016 .
  18. Markus Feldenkirchen , Gerald Traufetter: House of Breakdowns . In: Der Spiegel . No. 29 , 2019, pp. 32-40 ( online - 13 July 2019 ).
  19. BMVI: BMVI - Press Releases-Norbert Barthle new Parliamentary State Secretary . In: bmvi.de . Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure. February 11, 2015. Archived from the original on February 12, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
  20. Federal Ministry for Transport and Digital Infrastructure (Ed.): Andreas Scheuer is the new Federal Minister for Transport and Digital Infrastructure . Press release. Berlin March 14, 2018 ( bmvi.de ).
  21. jok: Michael Odenwald is the successor to State Secretary Klaus-Dieter Scheurle. In: Verkehrsrundschau. October 23, 2012.
  22. ^ Berliner Morgenpost- Berlin: Beermann's successor comes from Saxony-Anhalt. November 22, 2019, accessed on December 16, 2019 (German).