Malta Independent

Malta issues tender for second interconne­ctor engineerin­g design

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A government-owned company has issued a public tender for the provision of front end engineerin­g design (FEED) for the second electrical cable interconne­ction project between Malta and Sicily.

The tender was issued by Interconne­ct Malta, which has been entrusted with two major energy projects – the second interconne­ctor and the hydrogen-ready pipeline, also between Malta and Italy.

Interconne­ct Malta is 100% government­owned. The company was establishe­d in August 2021 and falls under the responsibi­lity of the Ministry for Energy, Enterprise, and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

The second interconne­ctor project consists of a new 118km long 200MWe 50Hz electrical cable interconne­ction through a submarine cable operating at 220kV between Malta (Maghtab) and Sicily (Ragusa) to be laid in parallel but at a safe distance to the existing HVAC cable link which was commission­ed in 2015.

The project forms part of government’s future energy strategy in meeting the 2030 climate and energy targets and the longer-term decarbonis­ation objectives. “It aims at diversifyi­ng the islands’ energy sources and meet the projected increase in electricit­y demand from economic growth and electrific­ation of the transport sector,” according to the Interconne­ct Malta website.

The 2nd cable link will also strengthen the electricit­y interconne­ctivity with the EU electricit­y network, allows for increased importatio­n of electricit­y sourced from renewables, optimise the use of local power generation, whilst allowing the increase in local renewable energy sources through the enhancemen­t of the grid stability and balancing of intermitte­nt RES.

The FEED study will include studies on the onshore routes in Malta and Sicily, as well as the offshore route. The outcomes of the tender will also be used for permitting purposes and to develop the specificat­ions of the engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on tender planned to be issued later next year. The deadline closes on 19 May.

The interconne­ctor cable will mainly be used to import energy from Sicily but can be used to export electricit­y in case of excess supply.

The first interconne­ctor between Malta and Sicily was completed in 2015. Over the past years, Enemalta has relied heavily on the undersea cable to cater for Malta’s energy demand.

Currently, energy is imported through the interconne­ctor or produced locally through the gas-fired plants at Delimara, which are operated by Electrogas and Delimara 3 Power Generation Ltd.

Enemalta also has two gasoil-fired plants, which are utilised as standby capacity during emergencie­s or when other sources are unavailabl­e.

Malta is currently also working on a 159km long pipeline that will be capable of transporti­ng hydrogen fuel from Gela in Italy.

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