Skip to main content
European Commission logo
English English
CORDIS - EU research results
CORDIS
CORDIS Web 30th anniversary CORDIS Web 30th anniversary

Article Category

Content archived on 2023-04-12

Article available in the following languages:

EN

Baltic energy systems: synchronisation by 2025

Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia joined the European Union in 2004, but their grids are still synchronised with Russia and Belarus. Now they have agreed on a target date to become a part of continental Europe’s energy system.

At the end of June 2018 the Baltic countries and Poland came to a political agreement for synchronising the Baltic States' electricity grid with the continental European network by 2025. The power systems of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia historically were a part of the Soviet Union “unified energy system”. In 1992, when the USSR fell apart, the technical problem of separating the power systems arose. At that time a range of factors (limited options and high reliability of the Soviet network) spoke in favour of keeping the energy systems integrated. In 2001 the existing synchronisation of Baltic countries’ grids with Russia and Belarus was reflected in the BRELL agreement, which focused on technical aspects of the power exchange. “It was a technical agreement signed at a time when no other conditions were available,” said Dangiras Mikalajunas, the former CEO of Lietuvos Energija (Lithuanian energy company). At present, the power systems of the Baltic States are tightly interconnected with Russian and Belarussian power systems with AC 330 kV lines. They import electricity produced in Russia, have access to the other countries’ power reserves, and participate in dispatch and regulation. Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia have always considered their dependence on Moscow as a threat, and their concerns have increased since the crisis in Ukraine. However, cutting this “umbilical cord” has been an uphill struggle. First, in the beginning of the 2000s the Baltic energy system was virtually isolated, there were not enough power lines connecting the countries with the rest of Europe. The negotiations regarding the first submarine cable Estlink 1 between Estonia and Finland started in 1999, but the project was completed only in 2006, after a harsh winter gave it a boost. The line quickly became one of the most congested on the Nordpool Elspot market, so another interconnector, Estlink 2, was launched in 2014. A third link the Baltic States have with the Scandinavian countries is Nordbalt, connecting Lithuania and Sweden. This high-voltage direct current cable with 700 MW capacity started transmitting electricity in 2016. These interconnectors allow the Baltic countries to establish a smoothly running Nordic-Baltic power market. The only link the Baltic States have with continental Europe – LitPol – was also launched in 2016. The line connects Lithuania and Poland, carrying 500 MW of electricity. This interconnector is of key importance for the Baltic synchronisation plan. However, experts say at least one more link with Poland would be needed. "In a true 'Energy Union' there is no room for energy islands and electricity has to be able to flow freely across borders. Today we are taking a significant step forward in bringing more security of supply for electricity consumers in the region and in boosting competition on the electricity market," said Miguel Arias Cañete, European Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy on the Nordbalt and Litpol links inauguration ceremony. Technical barriers often go hand in hand with economic ones. The countries have needed generous investments in power assets to make the transition from BRELL to the European energy system possible. The investments in the first link, Estlink 1, were estimated as high as EUR 110 million. They were made by private investors, and then recovered from special tariffs (designated fees paid by the interconnector users). The next interconnector, Estlink 2, cost EUR 320 million, and was funded by the European Investment Bank. Nordbalt, EUR 552 million, was built with funding from the European Energy Programme for Recovery. Finally, Litpol, which received over EUR 550 million, featured on the “Projects of the Common Interest” 2015 list. Read more: http://www.bestpaths-project.eu/en/news/543-baltic-energy-systems-synchronisation-by-2025

Keywords

energy, grid, baltic synchronisation, energy union

Countries

Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia