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EirGrid selects site for Celtic Interconnector converter

4C Offshore | Tom Russell
By: Tom Russell 23/11/2020 EirGrid
EirGrid has selected a site at Ballyadam near Carrigtwohill in East Cork on which to build a converter station for the Celtic Interconnector. The converter station is a key component of the €1 billion electricity project.

The site was chosen from a shortlist of three following a range of technical studies and consultation with local communities in East Cork. In addition to the site at Ballyadam, two sites near Knockraha were consulted on as potential locations for the converter station, an industrial-type building with electrical equipment that converts direct current electricity to alternating current and vice versa.

The consultation process resulted in a preference for Ballyadam as the most appropriate location for the new station given the existing and anticipated industrial and commercial activity in the area.

The site is 10 kilometres by road from the Knockraha electricity substation, a strong node on the national electricity transmission network and the final connection point for the interconnector.

The Ballyadam site is located on property owned by the IDA and is situated between Carrigtwohill and Midleton, to the north of the N25 Cork to Waterford road and south of the Cork to Midleton rail line.

Mark Foley, EirGrid chief executive, commented: “We received more than 1,000 responses to our most recent public consultation. There was support for further studies and assessment at Ballyadam, with many respondents supporting it as the most appropriate location for the converter station, given the industrial and commercial activity in the area.”

Over the past number of months, focused site assessments have been carried out at Ballyadam. Coupled with earlier studies and site investigations in the area, we identified a feasible location within the site for the converter station.

Mr Foley added: “Taking into consideration the constraints particular to each site and a range of criteria – technical, environmental, economic, social and deliverability -Ballyadam has been identified as the best performing option for the converter station site. It will be brought forward as the best-performing converter station site to the next stage of the project, the planning process.”

The interconnector power cables reach landfall in Ireland at Claycastle Beach in Youghal. From there they will travel underground to the converter station at Ballyadam and then on to the substation at Knockraha, also by way of underground cables.

The
Celtic Interconnector will provide the first direct link between Ireland’s electricity network and mainland Europe. When built, the interconnector is expected to consist of around 600 km of cabling, which will run along the seabed between France and Ireland. The cable will have the capacity to transmit up to 700 MW of electricity, the equivalent of supplying power to around 450,000 homes, and also provide a direct fibre optic communications link between Ireland and France. The project is co-funded by EirGrid and RTE with significant co-financing from the EU. In 2019, an award of €530.7 million was made by the European Commission’s Connecting Europe Facility towards the design and delivery of the project.



For more information on interconnector projects worldwide, click here. Alternatively you can projects on 4C Offshore's interactive map.

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