Thứ Tư, 13 tháng 11, 2019

Chinese trade visit presages big investment in Greece’s energy infrastructure

Beijing already owns 24% of Greece’s electricity transmission system operator and has pledged to back a new Greece-EU funded interconnector to Crete which is set to open up more possibilities for solar on the island. The arrival of two of China’s biggest lenders also offers the prospect of new investment in renewables.

This week it was the turn of Chinese president Xi Jinping to visit Greece, following a trip by counterpart Kyriakos Mitsotakis the other way last week, as a delegate at the China International Import Expo 2019 where the two leaders met up.

With China keen to expand its influence in Europe as part of its continent-spanning Belt and Road infrastructure project, and with Chinese state-owned shipping company Cosco owning a majority stake in the major shipping port of Piraeus, Xi’s two-day visit heralded the signing of 16 trade deals and memoranda of understanding.

Though PV was absent from the list of subjects directly addressed by representatives from the two nations’ business communities, the solar industry is expected to be among the beneficiaries from two developments that emerged from the state visit.

Grid investments  

The State Grid Corporation of China, the world’s biggest utility, signed a commitment to back a new electricity interconnector between the Greek mainland and Crete that is expected to unlock more solar capacity on the island as well as helping Greece vary its electric loads as it aims to phase out coal by 2028.

Grid restraints on sun-drenched Crete limit the amount of solar capacity which can be deployed there for anything other than self-consumption but the promised interconnector – which is supported by EU funding and expected to be operational next year – will offer more opportunity for exporting excess solar electricity back into the grid.

50 MW CSP investment

The arrangement appears to have already borne dividends with London-based solar developer Nur Energie committing to a 50 MW concentrating solar power (CSP) facility on the island, during Xi’s visit.

Beijing’s interest in the 134km subsea and 42km underground AC cable – described as “the longest submarine-underground AC cable interconnection in the world” by Greek transmission grid company Admie – is linked to China’s holding of a 24% stake in the grid company since 2017.

The Nur Energie deal included an agreement with the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, as well as with China’s Energy Engineering Group to collaborate on development of the Cretan CSP plant.

Bank of China to open branch in Greece

The CSP project is indicative of the potential benefits for the Greek renewables industry of the arrival of two of China’s ‘Big Four’ state-owned banks in the nation.

Bank of China, the world’s fourth largest lender, agreed to establish a branch in Greece during the trade visit and world number one the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China will establish a representative office. It is expected both institutions will invest in renewable energy to give Beijing ownership of a significant proportion of Greece’s clean energy infrastructure.

The visit also saw Mitsotakis open up domestic projects to Chinese investors, including Greek wind farms, and the nations pledged to work to roll out a planned €600 million investment in Piraeus. An article on voluntary contributor news site Greekreporter.com in March stated the Chinese money had been held up by planning and environmental issues.

With state-owned Cosco planning to raise its investment in the port to €900 million by building a fourth container terminal so it can use Piraeus as its gateway to Europe, the Middle East and Africa, the Chinese and Greek administrations signed a memorandum of understanding aimed at defining the conditions which must be met for the investment to come to fruition.

Although Greece’s heavily indebted Public Power Corporation was not the subject of any of the new trade agreements, China is understood to also be keen to own a slice of the nation’s electricity distribution networks.

The Mitsotakis administration is casting the net wide for strategic overseas investment to help finance a new energy policy focused on renewables and in August, the Greek and German governments agreed a 10-year green investment plan.


Lắp đặt điện mặt trời Khải Minh Tech
https://ift.tt/2X7bF6x
0906633505
info.khaiminhtech@gmail.com
80/39 Trần Quang Diệu, Phường 14, Quận 3
Lắp đặt điện mặt trời Khải Minh Tech
https://ift.tt/2ZH4TRU

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét