ENERGY: EuroAfrica Interconnector electricity cable final route agreed between Cyprus and Egypt

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The 1707km sub-sea EuroAfrica Interconnector cable that will connect the electricity grids of Egypt, Cyprus and Greece with Europe has entered the pre-works phase, with the Egyptian government giving its full support to EuroAfrica Interconnector, transforming Egypt as an electricity hub for Africa and agreeing to the electricity cable route, the landing point and the site of the HVDC converter station.


Following the meeting between President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and the Chairman and CEO of the EuroAfrica Interconnector Nasos Ktorides in Nicosia in November, 2017, a new meeting was held in Cairo between the Minister of Electricity and Renewable Energy, Dr. Mohamed Shaker and the Chairman and CEO of the project developer, where the EuroAfrica Interconnector cable route and a concrete timeframe for implementation were agreed.

At the meeting, attended by all the senior officials of the Ministry of Electricity and Renewable Energy, the exact route of the cable between Cyprus and Egypt was approved, as well as the landing point of the cable in Egypt, some 100 km west Damietta.

The decision for the ‘electricity highway’ between Egypt, Africa and the EU was taken in Cairo in February 2017 during the signing ceremony between Eng. Gaber Dessouki Moustafa, Chairman of the Egyptian Electricity Holding Company and CEO Nasos Ktorides, in the presence of the Minister of Electricity and Renewable Energy, and the Ambassadors of Cyprus and Greece in Cairo.

“The signing ceremony in Cairo on February 6, 2017, confirms how well the Egyptian government shares our common vision to see Egypt and Europe linked in an “electricity highway” through Cyprus that will lead to energy security and prosperity,” said Ktorides.

This inspired partnership can only bring benefits to the three participating nations. “Cyprus is becoming an electricity hub between Europe, Africa and Asia, and Egypt will become an energy hub for Africa and electricity carrier for and to the European continent,” he said.

In November, 2017, President El-Sisi had requested weekly information about the timely implementation of the project.

“I am fully committed to the project, up to the minute when I will press the button for the start of the EuroAfrica Interconnector,” Minister Shaker said during the latest meeting in Cairo.

“Europe will now be connected to Egypt, with our 4,000 years of history of culture, civilisation and trade, bringing Africa and Europe even closer,” he concluded.

The two stages of the EuroAfrica Interconnector – linking the cable from Egypt to Cyprus, from Cyprus to Crete and from Crete to Attica in Greece – have a capacity of 1,000MW each.

The recent discovery of vast hydrocarbon reserves in the ‘Zohr’ offshore gasfield within the Egyptian Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) place Egypt firmly on the worldwide energy map as a critical production and transportation hub over the next decades. Electricity energy transmitted by the EuroAfrica Interconnector will tap into Egypt’s huge resources of power generated from gas and renewable energy sources (RES).