News Categories
Other stories in Europe
- Borssele to stay in Dutch hands, rules court
- Euro grid needs €28 billion investment within five years
- TenneT to plan offshore grid
- EDF considers Edison stake
- Finland's wind sector finds itself becalmed as feed-in tariff fails to materialise
Tagcloud
AEP, anaerobic digestion, Anglian Water, Australasia, Benelux, BG Group, billing, bills, biomass, Bristol Water, British Energy, British Gas, budget, Business Stream, call centres, carbon capture, CCWater, Centrica, CHP, climate change, coal, competition, complaints, connections, Conservatives, Consumer Focus, consumer research, cost of capital, credit crunch, customers, Cyprus, Czech Republic, debt, Decc, defra, Defra, Denmark, Department of Energy and Climate Change, distributed generation, Dong, drainage, Drax, Drinking Water Inspectorate, Eastern Europe, eco-towns, economy, EDF, EDF Energy, effic, Efficiency, efficiency, electricity, electricity distribution, electricity generation, electricity retail, electricity transmission, emergencies, emissions, emissions trading, ENA, Enel, energy, Energy, energy distribution, energy efficiency, energy generation, energy policy, Energy retail, energy retail, energy security, energy services, energy suppliers, energy supply, energy transmission, engineering, environment, Environment Agency, Eon, ERA, Essent, Eurelectric, Europe, European Commission, European Union, finance, Finland, flooding, France, fuel poverty, gas, gas distribution, gas retail, gas storage, gas supply, gas transmission, gas transport, Gazprom, GDF Suez, geothermal, Germany, health and safety, heat, Heat, Iberdrola, ice, industrial relations, infrastructure, Infrastructure Planning Commission, innovation, interruptions, Ireland, Italy, jobs, leakage, legal, LNG, maintenance, metering, MPs, National Grid, NEA, Netherlands, NI Water, NIAUR, Nordic, Northern Gas Networks, Northern Ireland, Northumbrian Water, Npower, nuclear, offshore, offshore wind, Ofgem, Ofwat, Ombudsman Service, operations, ownership, pan-utility, Parliament, people, planning, po, policy, pollution, poverty, pri, price review, pricing, protest, quality, re, regulation, renewables, research, Russia, RWE, Scotia Gas Networks, scotland, Scotland, Scottish and Southern Energy, Scottish Power, Scottish renewables, Scottish Water, security of supply, selling, Severn Barrage, Severn Trent, Severn Trent Water, sewerage, skills, smart grids, smart metering, solar, South West Water, Southern Water, Spain, storage, streetworks, sustainability, Switzerland, tariffs, thames water, Thames Water, trading, unbundling, United Utilities, utility engineering, Vattenfall, vehicles, Veolia, waste management, wastewater, wastewater treatment, water, water abstraction, water distribution, water efficiency, water neutrality, water resources, water retail, water supply, water treatment, water uk, Water UK, weather, Welsh Power, Welsh Water, Wessex Water, Wics, wind, WWU, Yorkshire Water, zero-carbon development
< Estonian government takes on transmission system | Bulgaria plans outsource moves for water supply >
NorNed interconnector 'out of action for weeks'
Transmission companies Statnett and TenneT say that the NorNed cable will be unavailable for several weeks following a power failure on 29th January.
Statnett, which operates that high voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission link jointly with TenneT, says that it has detected a cable fault around 60 km off the coast of the Netherlands and that further investigations are being carried out.
NorNed was commissioned in 2008 and provides a link between the Dutch and Norwegian electricity markets. With a total length of 580 km, the NorNed cable has a capacity of 700 MW - enough to supply power to half of Amsterdam or Oslo.

Comment on this story
Sign up to our free email newsletters