Submarine power cable
A submarine power cable is a transmission cable for carrying electric power below the surface of the water. These are called "submarine" because they usually carry electric power beneath salt water but it is also possible to use submarine power cables beneath fresh water. Examples of the latter exist that connect the mainland with large islands in the St. Lawrence River.
Design technologies
The purpose of submarine power cables is the transport of electric current at high voltage. The electric core is a concentric assembly of inner conductor, electric insulation and protective layers. Modern three-core cables often carry optical fibers for data transmission or temperature measurement, in addition to the electrical conductors.Conductor
The conductor is made from copper or aluminum wires, the latter material having a small but increasing market share. Conductor sizes ≤ 1200 mm2 are most common, but sizes ≥ 2400 mm2 have been made occasionally. For voltages ≥ 12 kV the conductors are round, so that the insulation is exposed to a uniform electric field gradient. The conductor can be stranded from individual round wires, or can be a single solid wire. In some designs, profiled wires are laid up to form a round conductor with very small interstices between the wires.Insulation
Three different types of electric insulation around the conductor are mainly used today.Cross-linked polyethylene is used up to 420 kV system voltage. It is produced by extrusion, with an insulation thickness of up to about 30 mm; 36 kV class cables have only 5.5 – 8 mm insulation thickness. Certain formulations of XLPE insulation can also be used for DC.
Low-pressure oil-filled cables have an insulation lapped from paper strips. The entire cable core is impregnated with a low-viscosity insulation fluid. A central oil channel in the conductor facilitates oil flow in cables up to 525 kV for when the cable gets warm but rarely used in submarine cables due to oil pollution risk with cable damage.
Mass-impregnated cables have also a paper-lapped insulation but the impregnation compound is highly viscous and does not exit when the cable is damaged. Mass-impregnated insulation can be used for massive HVDC cables up to 525 kV.
Armoring
Cables ≥ 52 kV are equipped with an extruded lead sheath to prevent water intrusion. No other materials have been accepted so far. The lead alloy is extruded onto the insulation in long lengths.In this stage the product is called cable core. In single-core cables the core is surrounded by a concentric armoring. In three-core cables, three cable cores are laid-up in a spiral configuration before the armoring is applied.
The armoring consists most often of steel wires, soaked in bitumen for corrosion protection. Since the alternating magnetic field in AC cables causes losses in the armoring those cables are sometimes equipped with non-magnetic metallic materials.
AC or DC
Most electrical power transmission systems use alternating current, because transformers can easily change voltages as needed. Direct-current transmission requires a converter at each end of a direct current line to interface to an alternating current grid. A system using submarine power cables may be less costly overall if using high-voltage direct current transmission, especially on a long link where the capacitance of the cable would require too much additional charging current. The inner and outer conductors of a cable form the plates of a capacitor, and if the cable is long, the current that flows through this capacitance may be significant compared to the load current. This would require larger, therefore more costly, conductors for a given quantity of usable power to be transmitted.Operational submarine power cables
Alternating current cables
submarine cable systems for transmitting lower amounts of three-phase electric power can be constructed with three-core cables in which all three insulated conductors are placed into a single underwater cable. Most offshore-to-shore wind-farm cables are constructed this way.For larger amounts of transmitted power, the AC systems are composed of three separate single-core underwater cables, each containing just one insulated conductor and carrying one phase of the three phase electric current. A fourth identical cable is often added in parallel with the other three, simply as a spare in case one of the three primary cables is damaged and needs to be replaced. This damage can happen, for example, from a ship's anchor carelessly dropped onto it. The fourth cable can substitute for any one of the other three, given the proper electrical switching system.
Connecting | Connecting | Voltage | Length | Year | Notes |
Mainland British Columbia to Texada Island to Nile Creek Terminal | Vancouver Island / Dunsmuir Substation | 525 | Twelve, separate, oil filled single-phase cables. Nominal rating 1200 MW. | ||
Tarifa, Spain | Fardioua, Morocco through the Strait of Gibraltar | 400 | 26 | 1998 | A second one from 2006 Maximum depth:. |
Norwalk, CT, USA | Northport, NY, USA | 138 | 18 | A 3 core, XLPE insulated cable | |
Sicily | Malta | 220 | 2015 | The Malta–Sicily interconnector | |
Mainland Sweden | Bornholm Island, Denmark | 60 | The Bornholm Cable | ||
Mainland Italy | Sicily | 380 | 1985 | replacing the "Pylons of Messina" | |
Germany | Heligoland | 30 | |||
Negros Island | Panay Island, the Philippines | 138 | |||
Douglas Head, Isle of Man, | Bispham, Blackpool, England | 90 | 1999 | The Isle of Man to England Interconnector, a 3 core cable | |
Wolfe Island, Canada for the Wolfe Island Wind Farm | Kingston, Canada | 245 | 2008 | The first three-core XLPE submarine cable for 245 kV | |
Cape Tormentine, New Brunswick | Borden-Carleton, PEI | 2017 | Prince Edward Island Cables |
Direct current cables
Submarine power cables under construction
- 2x 150kV AC connections between Peloponnese and Crete Greece. Each cable will be 135km with max depth of 950m under sea level. It will be the longest AC submarine connection in the world.
- Atlantic Wind Connection between Delaware and New Jersey, potentially between Virginia and New York
- 500 MW capacity, 165 km DC Maritime Transmission Link between the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador and the province of Nova Scotia.
- On February 1, 2016 Danish and Dutch operators awarded construction contracts to Siemens and Prysmian for COBRAcable, a 294 km submarine cable to provide the two countries with 700 MW transmission at 320 kV DC starting in 2019.
Proposed submarine power cables
- EuroAsia Interconnector, a 1,520 km submarine power cable, reaching depths of up to under sea level, with the capacity to transmit 2,000 megawatts of electricity connecting Asia and Europe
- Champlain Hudson Power Express, 335-mile line. The Transmission Developers Company of Toronto, Ontario, is proposing "to use the Hudson River for the most ambitious underwater transmission project yet. Beginning south of Montreal, a 335-mile line would run along the bottom of Lake Champlain, and then down the bed of the Hudson all the way to New York City."
- Power Bridge, Hawaii
- Power Bridge, State of Maine
- Puerto Rico to the Virgin Islands
- 400 kV HVDC India to Sri Lanka
- 220 kV HVAC, 225 megawatts, 117 km Malta–Sicily interconnector between Magħtab, Malta, and Ragusa, Sicily.
- The 58.9-km, 161-kV Taiwan to the PengHu Islands submarine power cable system, the first submarine project of the Taiwan Power Company at this level, scheduled for completion in 2014. On 24 December 2010, the Taiwan-Penghu Undersea Cable Project of Taipower was approved to connect the electrical grid in Taiwan Island to the Penghu Islands of the Republic of China.
- The British and Icelandic Governments are supposedly in "active discussion" to build a cable between Scotland and Iceland to carry geothermal power to Scotland.
- Norwegian and German power companies have agreed to build NORD.LINK, a submarine cable transmitting up to 1,400 MW between the two countries by 2018.
- British and Danish power companies have agreed to study a Viking Link, a 740 km cable to provide the two countries with 1,400 MW transmission by 2022.
- British and Norwegian power companies have agreed to jointly construct NSN Link, a 730 km cable to provide the two countries with 1,400 MW transmission by 2021. Such a cable would be one of the longest in the world and cost between 1 1/2 and two billion euros.
- FAB between Great Britain and France via Alderney Island in the Channel Islands.
- EuroAfrica Interconnector, a 1,707 km submarine power cable, reaching depths of up to under sea level, with the capacity to transmit 2,000 megawatts of electricity connecting Africa and Europe