IPTO lists updated completion dates for grid links in 10-yr plan

Power grid operator IPTO has revised its time frames for the completion of a series of international grid interconnections, as well that of a project to connect Crete and Athens, in a draft of its new ten-year development plan covering 2025 to 2034, forwarded for public consultation yesterday.

Revisions included in the plan’s draft include the addition of a further two years for the delivery of a second Greek-Turkish electrical grid interconnection, previously set for completion in 2029 but now pushed out to 2031.

The completion target for a second Greek-Albanian grid interconnection was changed to 2031 from 2030.

Delivery of an additional Greek-Italian grid interconnection has been set for 2031. IPTO’s previous development plan did not include a completion date for this project, which indicates significant progress was achieved during the intermediate period.

A project to interconnect the Greek, Cypriot and Israeli grids has been set a 2029 completion date for its Greece-Cyprus segment, an 898-km stretch, from 2027 in the previous plan. IPTO was placed at the helm of this project only last year.

All required studies have been completed for this project’s Greece-Cyprus segment with 657 million euros in support funds provided by the Connecting Europe Facility.

The completion date for an upgrade of the Greece-North Macedonia grid interconnection has remained unchanged at 2030.

The IPTO development plan’s international section also includes two new projects, a Greek-German grid link dubbed the Green Aegean Interconnector, and a Greek-Saudi Arabian grid link named the Saudi Greek Interconnector.

Cypriot State’s entry into Great Sea Interconnector assured

The Cypriot State’s entry into Greek power grid operator IPTO’s Great Sea Interconnector subsidiary formed for the development of a Greece-Cyprus-Israel electricity interconnection is considered certain following positive high-level talks held yesterday in Cyprus.

An IPTO team led by CEO Manos Manousakis discussed the project with Cyprus’ president Nikos Christodoulides, joined by administration’s energy minister Giorgos Papanastasiou. The IPTO team also met with Cyprus’ regulatory authority for energy.

It is now considered just a matter of time before the finalized results of a feasibility study conducted on behalf of the Cypriot State are delivered. The study is expected to give the green light for a final investment decision.

The Cypriot State is expected to enter the Great Sea Interconnector subsidiary with an initial sum of 100 million euros from the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF).

IPTO is also expected to hold talks with two other prospective Great Sea Interconnector entrants, Israeli fund Aluma, and TAQA, the Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, for their participation in the project, budgeted at 1.9 billion euros, with 657 million euros secured through the Connecting Europe Facility.

The consortium could feature the three aforementioned participants along with IPTO, but it is still too early to tell if this could result in respective 25 percent stakes for all four.

Greece-Cyprus-Israel power grid link nearing development

The Greece-Cyprus-Israel electricity interconnection, now named the Great Sea Interconnector, is nearing development, its prospects driven by new investors and, above all, increased funding.

The project’s next big steps will develop along three fronts. Firstly, Norwegian company Nexans will install the cable section of the Crete-Cyprus interconnection, which, according to Manos Manousakis, CEO of Greek power grid operator IPTO, is imminent.

Secondly, the Greek operator will hold discussions with three prospective investors, namely the Cypriot State, Israeli fund Aluma, and TAQA, the Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, for their participation in the project.

Thirdly, funding details needs to be shaped. These details remain unclear at this stage as the project’s shareholders, and their stakes, have yet to be finalized.

The consortium could feature the three aforementioned candidates, along with IPTO, but it is still too early to tell if this could result in respective 25 percent stakes for all four.

A 657 million-euro sum from the project’s 1.9 billion euro has been secured through the Connecting Europe Facility. The remaining 1.3 billion euros will be raised through bank loans, both through the EIB and commercial banks, as is customary for this type of project.

Nexans is expected to begin installing the project’s cable for the Crete-Cyprus section as soon as a deposit is provided by CINEA, the European Climate, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency, managing decarbonization and sustainable growth.