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Terna and IPTO Sign 2-Billion-Euro Deal on Italy-Greece Power Connection

Italian power grid operator Terna, and its Greek counterpart IPTO have signed a deal for a new underwater electricity interconnector that will connect Italy with Greece. The agreement is worth almost 2 billion euros.

The deal was announced following a summit hosted by Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Melanie and her Greek counterpart KyriakosMitsotakis in Rome's Villa Doria Pamphili (17th century), which also included ministers from both nations.

Meloni said that "our geographical location in the Mediterranean has given us an advantage in terms of interconnections, since it is the shortest path between the Atlantic Ocean and the Indo-Pacific."

After a massive blackout that hit Spain and Portugal in the last month, nations began to look for ways to diversify their routes and supply.

Terna announced that the new high-voltage cable, GRITA 2, would have a maximum transmission capacity of 1,000 MW, and will span approximately 300 km, including 240 km subsea cables at depths up to 1,000 meters.

The statement added that the two companies will invest 1.9 billion dollars in the project.

The new infrastructure, which will begin on the Italian side in the south-eastern Puglia area, will work alongside the existing interconnection that has been operating since 2002 and with a capacity of 500 MW.

Mitsotakis said that a deal had been struck between Italy's Ferrovie dello Stato and Athens transport ministry to invest in improving railway safety in Greece. A train crash in Greece in 2023 killed 57 people.

The Greek leader said that the deal was about "kickstarting a new relationship...which has been tested under the shadow of an enormous tragedy".

The Hellenic Train in Greece is a subsidiary of Italy's FS. $1 = 0.8990 euros (Reporting and editing by Angelo Amante, Angeliki Koutantou)

(source: Reuters)