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EU to invest €150 million in energy infrastructure

Published by , Editor - Hydrocarbon Engineering
World Pipelines,


On 14 July, Member States agreed on the Commission's proposal to allocate €150 million to key trans-European energy infrastructure projects. The bulk of the support will go to projects in Central Eastern and South Eastern Europe, as well as to projects in the Baltic region. In total, 20 projects were selected following a call for proposals under Connecting Europe Facility (CEF), an EU funding programme for infrastructure. The selected projects will increase energy security and help end the isolation of Member States from EU wide energy networks. They will also contribute to the completion of a European energy market and the integration of renewable energy sources into the electricity grid.

"The completion of a truly competitive EU wide energy market is essential in order to turn the Energy Union into a reality,” said European Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy Miguel Arias Cañete. “But without reliable and well connected energy networks this will not happen. This is why we are investing in projects to integrate the market further and to diversify sources and routes, in particular in Central Eastern and South Eastern Europe as well as in the Baltic region."

In the electricity sector, the agreed list includes feasibility studies for the Celtic interconnector, which will link France and Ireland (two previously unconnected markets) through a long distance subsea cable. The construction of a new 400 kV internal transmission line in Bulgaria will also benefit from CEF financial assistance. This line is part of a cluster of four lines increasing the connectivity between Bulgaria and Greece. Support will also be given to the construction of the Lithuanian part of the Litpol Link, which will integrate the power system of Lithuania and those of other Baltic States further into the grid of Continental Europe, contributing to increasing the interconnection levels of both Poland and the Baltic States.

In the gas sector, the allocated grants will cover, amongst others, studies for the Chiren underground storage expansion project in Bulgaria and works on the interconnection between Poland and the Czech Republic. Funding will also be allocated to innovative studies on how to remove a major obstacle to the free flow of gas in the EU, namely the different practices of odorising gas in the transmission system. This study will identify solutions to allow bidirectional flows on a major north-south pipeline in Germany. The overall goal of the projects selected for financial support is to enhance the security of supply and improve market integration through the diversification of sources and routes.

Of the 20 proposals selected for funding, 17 relate to studies such as environmental impact assessments (€30 million), 3 to construction works (€120 million), 11 are in the gas sector (financial aid worth €80 million) and 9 are in the electricity sector (€70 million). The European Commission proposal to select these projects was supported by the CEF Coordination Committee, which consists of representatives from Member States. Later this month the Commission will formally adopt the list of proposals, which will receive financial assistance under CEF-Energy.


Adapted from press release by Rosalie Starling

Read the article online at: https://www.worldpipelines.com/business-news/15072015/eu-to-invest-150-million-in-energy-infrastructure-1102/

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