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Danish transmission system operator Energinet said the UK's imminent exit from the EU would not undermine the implementation of the planned 1.
4 GW Viking Link submarine cable project between Denmark and the UK
.
"At the moment, we are thinking about how to use cables after Brexit," Johannes Bruun, head of international electricity markets at Energinet, told Munters in a recent interview.
”
According to reports, this submarine high-voltage DC cable is the first interconnection system connecting the power grids of the United Kingdom and Denmark, with a transmission capacity of up to 1400 megawatts
.
German industrial giant Siemens has been awarded a contract of about 300 million euros to build converter stations in two countries, and work will start
next year.
Pryssmann, the world's largest cable manufacturer, has been awarded a contract worth nearly €700 million to design, manufacture and install HVDC cables for the grid interconnection system, including the entire 1,250 km submarine cable for the subsea section and 135 km of land cable
in the UK.
At the same time, Danish cable company NKT has also been awarded a contract worth 90 million euros to supply about 150 km of 525 kV MI HVDC land cables for the project to connect the Danish coast to the Revsing grid substation in the south of Geneva, which is expected to start
next year.
The 760-kilometre undersea interconnection system, which represents the first submarine cable connection between the UK and Denmark, will provide clean electricity
to more than 1.
4 million homes, representing the first submarine cable connection between the UK and Denmark.
According to the plan, by the end of 2023, the Viking subsea HVDC system will be put into operation
.
Danish transmission system operator Energinet said the UK's imminent exit from the EU would not undermine the implementation of the planned 1.
4 GW Viking Link submarine cable project between Denmark and the UK
.
"At the moment, we are thinking about how to use cables after Brexit," Johannes Bruun, head of international electricity markets at Energinet, told Munters in a recent interview.
”
According to reports, this submarine high-voltage DC cable is the first interconnection system connecting the power grids of the United Kingdom and Denmark, with a transmission capacity of up to 1400 megawatts
.
German industrial giant Siemens has been awarded a contract of about 300 million euros to build converter stations in two countries, and work will start
next year.
Pryssmann, the world's largest cable manufacturer, has been awarded a contract worth nearly €700 million to design, manufacture and install HVDC cables for the grid interconnection system, including the entire 1,250 km submarine cable for the subsea section and 135 km of land cable
in the UK.
At the same time, Danish cable company NKT has also been awarded a contract worth 90 million euros to supply about 150 km of 525 kV MI HVDC land cables for the project to connect the Danish coast to the Revsing grid substation in the south of Geneva, which is expected to start
next year.
The 760-kilometre undersea interconnection system, which represents the first submarine cable connection between the UK and Denmark, will provide clean electricity
to more than 1.
4 million homes, representing the first submarine cable connection between the UK and Denmark.
According to the plan, by the end of 2023, the Viking subsea HVDC system will be put into operation
.