← Back to Newsenergy
Prysmian Receives Green Light to Build Historic Europe-Africa Power Interconnector
By MGN Editorial•June 23, 2026 at 12:00 PM
Italian cable manufacturer Prysmian has been issued a notice to proceed for construction of the first subsea power interconnector linking Europe and Africa, marking a landmark moment in cross-continental energy infrastructure.
## Prysmian to Construct First Europe-Africa Subsea Power Link
Italian cabling giant Prysmian has received a formal notice to proceed for the construction of what will become the first subsea power interconnector between Europe and Africa, according to Offshore Energy. The development represents a significant milestone in the expansion of cross-continental renewable energy infrastructure and underscores the growing strategic importance of subsea cable technology in the global energy transition.
The project, once completed, will establish an unprecedented electrical link between the two continents, enabling the transfer of power across the Mediterranean and opening new corridors for renewable energy trade. North Africa has long been identified as a region with vast solar and wind energy potential, and a direct interconnector to European grids would allow that generation capacity to serve demand centres across the continent.
Prysmian, headquartered in Milan, is one of the world's leading manufacturers of submarine and underground cables and has an extensive track record in delivering complex offshore energy infrastructure projects globally. The issuance of a notice to proceed signals that contractual, regulatory, and logistical prerequisites have been satisfied, allowing full construction activities to commence.
The interconnector is expected to play a pivotal role in European energy security and decarbonisation strategies. The European Union has increasingly prioritised diversification of energy supply routes and the integration of renewable sources from neighbouring regions as part of its broader Green Deal objectives. A direct cable link to Africa aligns closely with these policy goals.
Subsea interconnectors of this scale require sophisticated cable-laying vessels, precision marine engineering, and extensive offshore project management — sectors in which Prysmian has established considerable expertise. The construction phase will involve significant maritime operations, including the deployment of specialised cable-lay vessels across some of the Mediterranean's deepest waters.
Further technical details regarding the cable route, capacity specifications, and projected completion timeline are expected to be disclosed as the project advances. Industry observers will be watching closely, as the successful delivery of this interconnector could pave the way for additional Europe-Africa energy links in the years ahead.
*Source: Offshore Energy*
#subsea cable#power interconnector#Prysmian#offshore energy#Mediterranean#energy transition#cable-lay vessels#renewable energy infrastructure
Related Articles
Arbitration Tribunal Formed Over Revoked LNG Terminal and Gas-to-Power Permits
Singapore-based Sinolam International has confirmed the establishment of an independent arbitration tribunal following the cancellation of permits for a gas-to-power and LNG terminal development, signalling a significant legal dispute with implications for emerging market energy investment.
Jun 24, 2026
Envision Showcases Integrated Energy Systems at Intersolar Europe 2026
Chinese energy technology firm Envision has debuted its integrated energy systems portfolio at Intersolar Europe 2026 in Munich, targeting controllable clean energy supply for AI, industry, and power grids.
Jun 24, 2026
Energy Transition Briefing: Autonomous Control Markets, Decarbonization Funding, and Storage Innovation Signal Accelerating Clean Energy Investment
A cluster of energy sector developments points to accelerating investment in autonomous control systems, decarbonization technologies, and energy storage solutions, with implications for maritime operators navigating the industry's green transition.
Jun 24, 2026
Maritime Industry Briefing: Gulf Oil Exports Rebound, Germany Scraps Frigate Programme, and Digital Tech Promises Billions in Energy Savings
UAE oil exports recover strongly in the wake of regional conflict, Germany cancels a major naval shipbuilding contract, and a Honeywell-MIT study projects transformative cost savings for LNG and oil production through AI-enabled digital technologies.
Jun 24, 2026
Energy Industry Briefing: Latin American NOC Partnership and Digital Technologies Set to Reshape Oil & Gas Economics
Brazil's Petrobras and Mexico's Pemex have signed a collaboration agreement to explore joint hydrocarbon ventures, while a new Honeywell-MIT study projects AI-enabled digital technologies could slash global energy production costs by hundreds of billions of dollars annually by 2050.
Jun 24, 2026