Commission participates in launch of EuroAsia Electricity Interconnector

Source: EuNews
14 October 2022

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Commissioner for Energy, Kadri Simson, participated today together with the President of Cyprus, Nicos Anastasiades, and the Ministers for Energy of Cyprus (Natasa Pilides) and Greece (Kostas Skrekas) in a ceremony in Nicosia marking the start of the construction stage of the EuroAsia Interconnector. This EU Project of Common Interest will consist of a 1000 MW undersea cable connecting the electricity grids of Cyprus and Greece via Crete. The interconnector will be the deepest and longest submarine electricity interconnection in the world. Its completion is expected by the end of 2026.

The project, which has been politically and financially supported by the EU, will bring an end to Cyprus’s energy isolation, effectively making all EU countries physically connected to the EU electricity grid. The EuroAsia Interconnector will reinforce the security of energy supply for Cyprus and Crete, integrating their energy systems with the European networks through mainland Greece. By boosting electricity interconnectivity, it will also help the integration of renewable energy sources in the region.

In her speech at the ceremony, Commissioner Simson said

The EuroAsia Interconnector is yet another key infrastructure project strengthening the EU’s energy security by linking Cyprus to the EU’s electricity grid and contributing to our ambitious decarbonisation objectives. We hope for a speedy construction process to make this project a reality as soon as possible.

Background

The EuroAsia interconnector is a Project of Common Interest (PCI) under the 5th Union List comprising a 1,200 km undersea cable from Israel to Crete via Cyprus. As a second phase, once the link to Crete is completed, an electricity link between Cyprus and Israel will be constructed.

The first phase of the project, with total estimated construction costs of €1.57 billion, received a €657 million EU grant under the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF). This is the second highest grant ever under CEF, after the award made to the Baltic synchronisation. The project has also been awarded a €100 million grant from the EU’s Recovery and Resilience Facility.

The interconnector is a multi-terminal high-voltage, direct current scheme which will connect the transmission networks of Greece, Cyprus and Israel, and will comprise three converter stations with sea-electrodes, interconnected by cables. At full deployment, the 500 kV interconnector will allow the transfer of 2000 MW. Its total offshore length is 1208 km (310 km Cyprus to Israel, 898 km Cyprus to Crete), while its onshore length is 25 km.

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