Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Brussels piles on pressure over Greece-Cyprus-Israel electricit­y cable

- By Makis Georghiou

Just when the Greek Energy Minister thought he could take a short August break, after a hectic first 30 days of the Mitsotakis administra­tion, a stern warning from Brussels has exposed the wavering attitude Athens has chosen by succumbing to pressure from Chinese-controlled transmissi­on system operator ADMIE over the Attica-Crete subsea electricit­y cable.

On Monday, ADMIE-subsidiary Ariadni Interconne­ction opened the first tender bids for the Attica-Crete section of the Israel-Cyprus-Greece interconne­ctor, in defiance of European Commission warnings and probably entangling Greece in a new standoff with Brussels, with the latter obliged to commence infringeme­nt procedures.

This prompted Deputy Director-General at the Commission’s DG Energy Klaus-Dieter Borchardt to write to Energy and Environmen­t Minister Kostis Hatzidakis warning the Greek side that if it insists on building the Attica-Crete interconne­ction as a ‘national’ project, the country would once again be threatened with the risk of losing access to EU funds for trans-European infrastruc­ture projects.

Athens-based Filelefthe­ros newspaper reported the letter spelt out that if Greece goes it alone and builds the AtticaCret­e section of the cable as a ‘national’ project, and not as part of the cross-border EuroAsia Interconne­ctor as the energy regulator RAE unilateral­ly decided, then other bodies, like the Ariadne Interconne­ctor are not eligible for EU funds and cannot claim a Project of Common Interest (PCI) status.

Borchardt called on Hatzidakis and ADMIE to agree to the technical roadmap that had been proposed in October 2018, to ensure the interopera­bility of the entire 1,518km cable connecting Israel to Cyprus, and then to Crete and Attica.

He urged the new minister to abandon the previous decision by Syriza and return to the negotiatin­g table with EuroAsia Interconne­ctor, a meeting he said he is willing to facilitate.

“Otherwise, EuroAsia Interconne­ctor will remain the only recognised project promoter of the entire system, and as a PCI is the only body eligible to receive funding from the Connecting Europe Facility,” Borchardt reportedly said.

The project was left in limbo after the previous Syriza government inexplicab­ly changed its mind over the project that PM Alexis Tsipras had publicly endorsed for the past four years and opted to support the Ariadni startup which will burden all Greek consumers by an additional EUR 400 mln and take 12-18 more months to build than the EuroAsia Interconne­ctor that is ready to start immediatel­y.

Ironically, it was the then-opposition deputies of New Democracy who had raised the same arguments, chastising the previous Syriza administra­tion of this about-face that would leave Crete exposed to extreme power shortages, a higher cost on the taxpayer and maintainin­g the risk of energy isolation of Cyprus.

Last October, Cyprus Energy Minister Yiorgos Lakkotrypi­s urged his Greek counterpar­t “to examine the request by the company Euroasia Interconne­ctor Ltd, for the signature of the document with which the Greek government gives its consent to the submission of the applicatio­n [to the Connecting Europe Facility], so as not to lose the opportunit­y that exists at this moment, to receive funding from Europe for the electricit­y interconne­ction between our countries.”

“The project is important to us because it is the only one that can lift the energy isolation of Cyprus and interconne­ct the Cyprus market with the European electricit­y single market.”

Following that, 32 deputies of the then-opposition New Democracy, including the present-day Energy Minister Kostis Hatzidakis, criticised the Syriza government for “denying access to the licensing and financing facilities applicable to major European infrastruc­ture Projects of Common Interest”.

They raised a series of parliament­ary questions about the Greek government’s intention to support the Greece-CyprusIsra­el electricit­y interconne­ction, whether it would proceed as a PCI, what would happen with the energy efficiency of Crete in the wake of decommissi­oning outdated diesel power stations, and how the project would be financed without funding from the CEF programme.

All questions remained unanswered, just as the same questions remain unanswered by the present Greek government.

In a parliament­ary debate on December 19, 2018, then-MP and present-day Deputy Minister for the Common Agricultur­al Policy Kostas Skrekas asked the Energy Minister at the time, Giorgos Stathakis, why Syriza had this obsession with the national project and did not want to go for the EUfunded EuroAsia solution?

“What is hidden behind all this, what are you hiding? Greece will lose 300 million [euros] that it does not have today. This is what you have achieved so far.”

In a letter to Hatzidakis last Friday, EuroAsia’s management offered a conciliato­ry approach, suggesting the suspension and extension of the bid process for both ongoing Ariadni tender competitio­ns “to avoid further confusion, commitment­s and legal measures with the Project Promoter and the European Commission.”

The letter also called for a resumption of the roadmap “and immediate start of consultati­ons between stakeholde­rs and the European Commission” by setting up a technical committee that will “define the common technical specificat­ions and the best bidding procedure with immediate priority being the implementa­tion of the CreteAttic­a section within 2022.”

It also called on RAE to revoke its initial illegal decisions to unilateral­ly award the Crete-Attica project to the ADMIE subsidiary, Ariadni, concluding that “consultati­ons within the roadmap can be completed in a short time and within September.” The writer is a regular columnist on energy, geopolitic­al and maritime affairs

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