Spanien löst sich von Frankreich und erwägt den Bau eines riesigen Unterseekabels über den Atlantik nach Irland, um seine elektrische Isolation zu beenden

https://computerhoy.20minutos.es/tecnologia/ya-es-oficial-espana-rompe-con-francia-estudia-un-enorme-cable-submarino-bajo-atlantico-con-irlanda-para-acabar-con-aislamiento_6963086_0.html

Von RealToiletPaper007

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  1. RealToiletPaper007 on

    > Spain is probably one of the European Union countries that has invested the most in the transition to renewable energy. The Iberian Peninsula has become an energy island alongside Portugal.

    > The initial concept of the so-called energy island is an interesting one, but Spain faces a major obstacle: France. Its neighbour has created a bottleneck that prevents the export of its surplus solar energy.

    > The Spain–France land-based interconnection across the Pyrenees has a capacity of barely 3,000 MW, which Portugal also uses as one of the few outlets from the Iberian Peninsula. The existing bidirectional high-voltage land-based power lines are not sufficient.

    > The European Commission aims to reduce external dependence by 2030 through improved energy interconnections, but for that, France will play a key role, at least in Spain’s strategy.

    > Spain has several options for exporting its energy to Europe. The most viable (and cost-effective) route was via France, but there is another route across the Mediterranean with two massive interconnections to Italy.

    > Now, a new solution is also gaining traction: a massive undersea cable across the Atlantic linking Spain and Ireland. The government is beginning to explore this possibility, with an estimated length of between 1,000 and 1,100 kilometres.

    > The undersea cable across the Atlantic would link the north coast of Spain, via Asturias, with the south coast of Ireland. There is no defined route yet, but the infrastructure will have to navigate the Bay of Biscay and the Celtic Sea, which are characterised by great depths and heavy swells.

    > Spain and Ireland have signed an initial agreement to study the feasibility of a massive undersea electricity cable during the WindEurope 2026 conference held in Madrid. This is only a first step, but it is the most important one.

    > Both electricity markets are the least interconnected in Europe and are labelled ‘energy islands’. Spain and Ireland have limited capacity to export surplus renewable energy and an infrastructure that is more vulnerable to situations such as Spain’s massive blackout of 2025.

    > The war in Ukraine was a warning, but the situation has worsened with the conflict in Iran and the gas crisis. Spain is one of Europe’s largest producers of solar energy, but it cannot export its surplus.

    > Its partner in the agreement would play a key role. Spain would export its surplus solar energy, whilst Ireland would do the same with its offshore wind farms when Atlantic storms hit the north of the country.

  2. PsychologicalLion824 on

    yeah right. The one to Italy hasn´t been made yet and Italy is a much larger market while being much closer to Spain than Ireland.

  3. They haven’t “broken away”. Clickbait. Everyone is looking at all the options. As they should.

  4. „break away“ implies they want to cut their grid from France which Spain is not.

    That’s plain disinformation.

  5. FelizIntrovertido on

    Spain needs connections and Ireland is not a real solution, it’s just a secondary market.
    France has played a lot with its position and everybody knows it.
    Connections with Italy are a must for Spain and that will really make a difference

  6. Agitated-Airline6760 on

    It’s better for Spain to set up a scheme to use the excess solar energy which can then be transported all over the world vs sending electricity 1000km away using undersea cables. For example, Hydrogen/Ammonia

  7. Wonderful_Trick_4251 on

    Surely a connector to the UK would e more viable give its population is multitudes of that if Ireland. Ireland is hardly going to be a massive customer

  8. DM_me_ur_PPSN on

    It’s a good plan when you consider the energy potential of each countries climates. Ireland will generate a lot of wind in winter when Spains solar is not as productive and vice-versa, they can essentially balance each other seasonally.

  9. Context: France has been opposing Spain’s plans to connect to the rest of Europe electrically since forever.

    They want to sell their nuclear and don’t want cheaper solar competition entering the market.

  10. Wtf.

    1. Is not „breaking“
    2. It is adding new connection for electric grud
    3 it is already connected with Marocco and Portugal, so it is not isolated

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