IPTO, Nexans discuss Crete-Cyprus grid link details

An electrical grid interconnection to link the Cretan and Cypriot systems, work on which began last month, was essentially officially launched yesterday at a meeting in Athens between Greek power grid operator IPTO’s leadership and top officials of French multinational cable and optical fiber industry Nexans.

During the session – the first major meeting between IPTO’s leadership and Nexans’ chief operating officer Mathias Bruneau, who led a ten-member team – the cooperation’s principles, as well as project fundamentals, including when deep-sea surveys would commence, the interconnection’s routing and schedule, were all discussed in detail.

Installation of the project’s cable is planned to begin in 2026 and be completed in 2029. The Crete-Cyprus grid interconnection, a project budgeted at 1.2 billion euros, will cover a distance of 898 kilometers.

Just days ago, IPTO, the Greek power grid operator, reached an agreement with its Israeli counterpart to assemble technical teams for a cost-benefit analysis concerning the project’s next stage, to link the Cypriot and Israeli electrical grids.

Energy regulators of both countries will rely on the results of the CBA to divide costs that will be recovered through regulated revenues.

The wider project’s two sections, dubbed the Great Sea Interconnector, planned to link the Greek, Cypriot and Israeli electrical grids, will cover a total distance of 1,208 kilometers and is budgeted at 2.4 billion euros.