Gridlink Interconnector

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Coordinates51°25′13″N 0°36′47″E / 51.4204°N 0.6131°E / 51.4204; 0.6131 (HVDC Kingsnorth)
50°57′42″N 2°11′35″E / 50.9617°N 2.1931°E / 50.9617; 2.1931 (HVDC Warande)
General directionwest-east, northwest–southeast
FromKingsnorth, Kent, England
Gridlink
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom, France
Coordinates51°25′13″N 0°36′47″E / 51.4204°N 0.6131°E / 51.4204; 0.6131 (HVDC Kingsnorth)
50°57′42″N 2°11′35″E / 50.9617°N 2.1931°E / 50.9617; 2.1931 (HVDC Warande)
General directionwest-east, northwest–southeast
FromKingsnorth, Kent, England
ToWarande, Nord, France
Construction information
Expected2027
Technical information
Typesubmarine cable
Type of currenthigh-voltage direct current
Total length140 km (87 mi)
Power rating1,400 MW
AC voltage440 kV
DC voltage525 kV

Gridlink Interconnector is a proposed submarine power cable between England and France. The 1,400 MW high-voltage direct current connector would link Kingsnorth National Grid substation in north Kent, England, with Réseau de Transport d'Électricité Warande substation in Bourbourg (Nord) near Dunkirk in northern France.[1][2]

Electricity interconnectors are high-voltage transmission links, linking two electricity grids. Electricity can flow in both directions, allowing a grid to import electricity when it is running short so it does not have to fire up old, inefficient fossil fuel power stations. Renewable sources are dependent on the time of day and on the weather conditions; the required load can be balanced by interconnecting grids over a large region, in this case over the Northern Seas Offshore Grid, and the North–South Western EU Interconnections.[3]

Current status

On 28 January 2022 the French Energy Regulatory Commission (fr) rejected an investment request by Gridlink to operate the interconnector in France citing legal uncertainties and possibly reduced benefits due to Brexit, stating that "The cost-benefit analysis of the project does not show with sufficient certainty, on average based on the available contrasted scenarios, that the project brings a net benefit to the community."[4]

Technical description

The project to build this 1,400-megawatt (1.4 GW) interconnector comprises

  • 140 km (87 miles) submarine cable (108 km (67 miles) in UK waters and 32 km (20 miles) in French territorial waters), working at a direct current voltage of approximately 525 kV.
  • Underground cables from the shoreline to the converter station at Kingsnorth and Warande.
  • Converter stations in Kingsnorth and Warande where the high-voltage direct current voltage is converted to 400 kV alternating current, which is the working voltage of both the networks.
  • Underground high-voltage connector cables from the converter stations to the UK and French networks
  • An additional substation in France.[3]:3

Proposed project timescale

The projected timescale was:

Awarded Project of Common Interest status by the European Commission on 23 November 2017 (Commission Delegated Regulation 2018/540)
Application for UK development consents was for September 2020, and in France November 2020.
Construction contracts were to be awarded July 2021, with detailed planning consents to be completed in September 2021.
Construction was to start December 2021.
Commissioning was due for June 2024.
Commercial operations were to start in December 2024.

On 28 January 2022, the French Energy Regulatory Commission [fr] declined an investment request by Gridlink to operate the interconnector in France, halting the timescale.[3]:5

Route

References

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