From Wikipedia - Reading time: 6 min
| NORD.LINK | |
|---|---|
![]() Location of NORD.LINK | |
| Location | |
| Country | Norway Germany |
| From | Ertsmyra, Norway |
| Passes through | North Sea |
| To | Büsum shore and Wilster substation, Germany[1] |
| Ownership information | |
| Partners | Statnett TenneT TSO / KfW |
| Construction information | |
| Commissioned | May 2021 |
| Technical information | |
| Type | submarine cable, land cable, overhead line |
| Type of current | HVDC |
| Total length | 625 km (388 mi) |
| Power rating | 1,400 MW |
| DC voltage | 500 kV |
| No. of poles | 2 |
| No. of circuits | 1 |
NordLink is a subsea 1,400 megawatt (MW) HVDC power cable between Norway and Germany, opened in May 2021.[2] The 625 kilometres (388 mi) long line operates at a voltage of 500 kV DC.[3][4] It consists of 54 kilometres long land cable in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, a 516 kilometres long submarine cable between Germany and Norway and a 53 kilometres long overhead line with 140 towers in Norway.
It is estimated to cost €1.5–2 billion,[5] which was financed in 2015[6] when Statnett decided to realize the project.[7] The interconnector was installed between a new substation at Ertsmyra (near Tonstad) in Norway and Wilster substation[1] in Schleswig-Holstein in Germany.[8] The connection was expected to be completed in 2020.[6][9] When testing in September 2020, it accidentally imported the full 1,400 MW into Norway for almost a minute, causing cascading grid effects such as a 0.5 Hz frequency change across the Nordic synchronous area.[10][11] The opening ceremony took place on 27 May 2021.[2]
In November 2021, amid high demand for electricity in Europe, the increased exports from Norway to continental Europe caused conflict with the grid operator of Sweden, which cut export capacity in half, causing the Norwegian operator to do the same for exports to Sweden (on which Denmark and Finland also rely).[12] Grid constraints inside Norway and Germany sometimes restrict NordLink capacity to less than maximum.[13][14]
The Norwegian state-owned company and transmission system operator, Statnett SF, owns 50% of the project, whilst the Dutch transmission system operator TenneT TSO and the German state-owned bank KfW own the other half. A cable between Norway and Germany is listed in the EU's projects of common interest (PCI).[3][15]
| Site | Coordinates |
|---|---|
| Tonstad HVDC converter station | 58°40′06″N 6°45′15″E / 58.66833°N 6.75417°E |
| Djupvik Cable Terminal | 58°15′59″N 6°40′47″E / 58.26639°N 6.67972°E |
| Wilster HVDC converter station | 53°55′10″N 9°20′40″E / 53.91944°N 9.34444°E |
Sweden moved to safeguard the security of its grid after Norway started increasing electricity exports through huge new cables to Germany and the U.K. [...] The Swedish grid manager Svenska Kraftnat has reduced export capacity at cables across its borders by as much as half this year to keep operations secure. [...] At the same time, Norway halving available export capacity to about 1,200 megawatts will increase risk of shortages.