Murraylink

Murraylink
Location
CountryAustralia
Coordinates34°17′37″S 142°14′20″E / 34.29361°S 142.23889°E / -34.29361; 142.23889 (Red Cliffs Static Inverter Plant)
34°14′17″S 140°36′01″E / 34.23806°S 140.60028°E / -34.23806; 140.60028 (Berri Static Inverter Plant)
FromBerri, South Australia
ToRed Cliffs, Victoria
Ownership information
OwnerEnergy Infrastructure Investment
OperatorAPA Group
Construction information
Manufacturer of conductor/cableABB
Commissioned2002
Technical information
Typeunderground cable
Type of currentLight HVDC
Total length180 km (110 mi)
Power rating220 MW
AC voltage132 kV (Berri)
220 kV (Red Cliffs)
DC voltage±150 kV
No. of poles2

Murraylink is an Australian high voltage direct current electricity transmission link between Berri in South Australia and Red Cliffs in Victoria, connecting the two state electricity grids. Murraylink was commissioned in 2002 and is believed to be the world's longest underground transmission system and cost more than A$177 million. It was built by TransEnergie Australia, a subsidiary of Hydro-Québec. It was sold to the Australian Pipeline Trust (APA Group) in March 2006 for A$153 million. In December 2008 ownership of Murraylink (as well as Directlink) was transferred to the newly formed Energy Infrastructure Investments Group, while APA continued as the operator.[1] The ownership of EII is APA with 19.9%, with the balance with Japan-based Marubeni Corporation with 49.9% and Osaka Gas with 30.2%.[2]