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EU aims to reduce prices and improve security by tackling 8 bottlenecks in the power grid

According to the Commission president, eight bottlenecks in the power grid will be addressed as a priority by the European Union, in order to reduce the uncompetitive prices of energy and improve energy security.

"I present today a new project called Energy Highways. Eight critical bottlenecks have been identified in our energy infrastructure. "From the Oresund Strait and the Sicilian Canal", said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in her State of the Union Address in Strasbourg.

We will work to eliminate these bottlenecks, one at a time.

The 27-member states of the EU have a wide range of prices and connections, but the electrification ambitions are still largely unfulfilled.

In the first half of this year, Spain, Portugal, and southeastern Europe (especially Greece) experienced blackouts across their entire countries.

Dan Jorgensen, EU Energy Commissioner told reporters at a press conference in Strasbourg: "If we don't improve our energy system connectivity, we won't be able to reduce the prices (of energy) as much as we need."

The project will focus on increasing electricity interconnections from the Iberian Peninsula to France. In May, Spain and Portugal requested the Commission's intervention.

Jorgensen stated, "We can't say for sure why the blackout happened but experts agree that the more connected and better connected you are the lower the chance of blackouts."

"It is our main priority to see that it happens." I am confident that France too will see its value.

The following is a list of priority bottlenecks.

1. Improve the integration of Iberia by power interconnectors crossing the Pyrenees Mountains to France

2. Connect Cyprus to continental Europe and end its electrical isolation

3. Strengthening power links between the Baltic States

4. Energy supply in the Balkans and neighbouring eastern states

5. Make the North Sea an offshore interconnector hub

6. South hydrogen corridor linking the North Sea and the Mediterranean

7. Southwest hydrogen corridor between Portugal and Germany

8. Reporting by Julia Payne, Editing by Ros Russel.

(source: Reuters)