Renewables

Europe, North America could trade solar power via world’s biggest subsea interconnector

europe north america could trade solar power via worlds biggest subsea interconnector

Photo: Pexels

Published

June 27, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

June 27, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Three European businessmen are proposing a subsea power interconnector to link Europe with North America. The world’s biggest subsea energy interconnector would transfer renewable electricity in both directions, harnessing the sun’s movement across the sky.

The subsea interconnector, which is still just a proposal, would consist of three pairs of high-voltage cables stretching more than 3,200 kilometers across the floor of the Atlantic to connect the western United Kingdom with eastern Canada, and possibly New York with western France, according to a report by CNN.

The cables would transmit solar electricity between the continents depending on the time of day

The project would take advantage of the sun’s journey across the sky, supplying electricity from European solar power plants to North America when the sun is shining in Europe, and vice versa.

When the sun is high in Europe, the continent has more power than it needs, and that’s when it could send it to the United States, explains Simon Ludlam, founder and CEO of Etchea Energy. He is one of the three entrepreneurs proposing the project. Later, when the sun is at its zenith on the East Coast, Europe can get energy from there, according to him.

The cables could send 6 GW of energy in both directions at the speed of light, an equivalent to the output of six large-scale nuclear power plants, according to Laurent Segalen, founder of London-based renewable energy firm Megawatt-X, also part of the group backing the project.

The project, called NATO-L, also has geopolitical implications

The transatlantic interconnector project is in its early stages and is not expected to be completed before mid-2030s. It would need significant investment from several countries. The cost is difficult to predict. It has roughly been estimated at above GBP 20 billion (EUR 23.6 billion) but possibly less than GBP 46 billion (EUR 54.3 billion), which is the budget for the UK’s new nuclear power station, Hinkley Point C, according to the Telegraph.

Still, the entrepreneurs behind the proposal are optimistic because the transatlantic interconnector would not only contribute to climate action but also challenge Russia in the global energy wars and help compete with China for dominance in clean energy technology, the media outlet wrote.

Reflecting the geopolitical implications of the project, they even named it NATO-L, or the North Atlantic Transmission One-Link, according to the report.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

croatia hrvatska elektroprivreda hep loan goverment

Croatian power utility HEP to borrow EUR 400 million

19 December 2025 - Although the 2021-2023 global energy crisis has ended, its consequences will be felt for a long time to come

Aurora bess battery storage Bulgaria Flexible Energy Forecast service

Aurora launches Bulgaria Flexible Energy Forecast service

19 December 2025 - Aurora decided to expand its inaugural Romanian Flexible Energy Forecast service, released in April, and other established forecasts for SEE

rystad power pricing interval bess

EU’s new power pricing interval boosts BESS profit potential – analysis

19 December 2025 - Thanks to the 15-minute trading interval, arbitrage potential on the day-ahead power markets has increased by 14% on average, Rystad says

Bulgaria approves support for BESS projects totaling more than 4 GWh

Bulgaria approves RESTORE funds for over 4 GWh in BESS projects

19 December 2025 - Developers of 31 standalone battery storage facilities in Bulgaria won EUR 117 million from European Union funding