The new link will facilitate the strategic exchange of energy between the two countries and will connect the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries with the African continent.
October 5, 2021
Prysmian Group has been awarded a contract for a ±500kV HVDC submarine and land cable system to create an interconnection between the Arab Republic of Egypt and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia worth around EUR 221 million. The project was awarded to Prysmian Group by the Egyptian Electricity Transmission Company (EETC) and the Saudi Electricity Company (SEC). The signature of the contract is expected in early October 2021.
The project involves the design, supply, installation and commissioning of around 127.5 km of HVDC ±500kV Mass Impregnated submarine single-core cables, 43.5 km of 36kV XLPE submarine single-core cables and double-wire armouring, and 61 km of MINISUB submarine fibre optic cables for telecommunications and Distributed Temperature Sensing (DTS) monitoring. This wider interconnection will transport electricity between the Badr substation (Cairo, Egypt) and the Madinah East substation in Saudi Arabia.
The cable route will cross the Gulf of Aqaba, spanning the territorial waters of Egypt and Saudi Arabia with a route length of approximately 20 km and deep-water installation at around 1,000 m, in addition to sections of underground land cables between the landfall and the transition stations located on each side. The delivery and commissioning of the project are scheduled for 2024.
Also Read: World’s Longest Subsea Cable to Send Clean Energy From Morocco to the UK.
The mass impregnated (MI) cables will be produced in Arco Felice, Italy — Prysmian Group’s centre of excellence for the production of this kind of products. The fibre optic submarine cables will be manufactured in Nordenham, Germany.
The offshore installation activities will be performed by the Group’s cable-laying vessels, suitable for deep-water cable-laying operations.