The framework contract includes the Tyrrhenian Link project, envisaging the design, supply, submarine and land installation, and commissioning of a total of over 1,500 km of submarine cables to support the power exchange among Sardinia, Sicily and Campania, thus reinforcing the Mediterranean energy hub.
The Tyrrhenian Link project involves the turn-key installation of one to three 500 kV HVDC links, each one 500 km long, of single-core cables with Mass Impregnated insulation and double wire armoring. The innovative aramidic armoring recently developed by Prysmian Group and the new vessel Leonardo da Vinci will enable the installation and maintenance of the Tyrrhenian Link at a water depth of 2,000 meters, the deepest ever reached with a power cable. The framework contract also includes an electrode system and an optical fiber cable for system monitoring, as well as land civil works and landfall HDD (Horizontal Directional Drilling).
The submarine and land cables will be manufactured at the Arco Felice plant (Naples), Prysmian Group’s center of excellence for submarine cables. With the aim of aligning the plant’s production capacity and developing a new R&D center to support the energy transition, the Group has already approved a major investment plan of approximately €80 million. Cable laying will be mostly performed by the Leonardo da Vinci, the world’s largest cable-laying vessel, entered into operations in August 2021. Delivery and commissioning are expected in 2025-2028.
“We are proud to have once again been chosen by Terna as a partner for this milestone infrastructure project, aimed at providing a more robust and sustainable national power grid,” stated Valerio Battista, Prysmian Group CEO. “We have proven to be able to offer the widest industry expertise, as well as technology and assets, to execute such an extensive and challenging project.”
The new 1,000 MW submarine link will help Italy reach its energy transition goals, enabling three regions to increase their solar and wind power exchange capacity generated locally. This will therefore support the development of renewable energy through better use of energy flows and a more efficient market.
“This contract adds to the other €2.3 billion projects already secured by Prysmian in 2021, thus further strengthening the Group’s ambition to become the strategic partner for developing power grids in support of the energy transition,” underlines Hakan Ozmen Prysmian Group EVP Project Business.
Prysmian Group has undertaken many other projects with Terna, like the link connecting Sicily to the Italian peninsula and the new submarine cable links between Capri and the mainland to supply the island with energy form renewable sources, in order to decommission its fossil-fueled electricity plant and thereby reduce CO2 emissions. The SA.PE.I. links (Sardinia-Italian mainland) for Terna are still the world’s deepest underwater interconnection at 1,600 meters. Prysmian Group executed several other important submarine links in the Mediterranean Sea, like the Crete-Peloponnese link, installing for the first time at a 1,000-metre depth a new synthetic-armored cable, which is 30% lighter than steel-wrapped cables.
Among the other power transmission links that the Group is developing worldwide are the Viking link, three strategic HVDC land cable projects for power transmission in Germany, and the recently secured HVDC SOO Green link, a milestone in developing a clean power grid in the USA. In 2021 the Group also secured several offshore wind farm projects, like the SOFIA Offshore Wind Farm, the largest wind farm under construction, and the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW) in the United States that will have a total capacity of 2.6 GW.