SwePol

SwePol
Map
Location of SwePol
Location
CountrySweden, Poland
Coordinates54°30′7.6″N 16°53′28.4″E / 54.502111°N 16.891222°E / 54.502111; 16.891222 (SwePol - Bruskowo Wielkie (Slupsk) Static Inverter Plant)
56°09′10.7″N 14°50′29.4″E / 56.152972°N 14.841500°E / 56.152972; 14.841500 (SwePol - Stärnö Static Inverter Plant)
General directionnorth–south
FromStärnö Static Inverter Plant, Sweden
Passes throughBaltic Sea
ToBruskowo Wielkie Static Inverter Plant, Poland
Ownership information
OwnerSvenska Kraftnät, PSE-Operator
Construction information
Manufacturer of conductor/cableABB
Manufacturer of substationsABB
Commissioned2000
Technical information
Typesubsea cable
Type of currentHVDC
Total length254 km (158 mi)
Power rating600 MW
AC voltage400 kV (both ends)
DC voltage450 kV
No. of poles1

SwePol is a 254.05-kilometre (157.86 mi)-long monopolar high-voltage direct current (HVDC) submarine cable between the Stärnö peninsula near Karlshamn, Sweden, and Bruskowo Wielkie, near Słupsk, Poland.[1] The link was inaugurated in 2000 and can transmit up to 600 MW power at a voltage of 450 kV.

The cable has a cross section of 2,100 square millimetres (3.3 sq in). It runs for 2.22 kilometres (1.38 mi) as an underground cable from the Stärno HVDC Station to the shore of the Baltic Sea. The 239.28 kilometres (148.68 mi) long submarine cable comes ashore in Poland near Ustka at 54°34′25″N 16°46′57″E / 54.57361°N 16.78250°E / 54.57361; 16.78250 (SwePol enters Poland) and runs underground for the remaining 12.55 kilometres (7.80 mi) to Bruskowo Wielkie HVDC Static Inverter Plant.

Unlike other monopolar HVDC schemes, Swepol uses a metallic return consisting of 2 cables with 630 square millimetres (0.98 sq in) sections for the submarine portion of the line, and a single cable with 1,100 square millimetres (1.7 sq in) sections for the land portions.

Both stations use air-core inductance smoothing rectifiers of 225 mH and a weight of 27.5 tonnes (61,000 lb), with filters for the 11th, 13th, 24th, and 36th harmonics. Each filter consists of a coil and a capacitor switched in row. The filters for the 11th and 13th harmonics are adjustable. The filters deliver a reactive power of 95 Mvar. Additional 95 Mvar reactive power is delivered by a capacitor bank. Each station's static inverter, which is switched as a 12-pulse thyristor bridge, consists of 792 thyristors arranged in three 16-metre (52 ft) high towers installed in a valve hall.

It was initially owned and maintained by SwePol Link AB, a company jointly owned by the state-owned Swedish power company Svenska Kraftnät (51%), Vattenfall (16%), and Polish transmission system operator PSE-Operator (33%), but the company was liquidated and the cable was acquired by Svenska Kraftnät for the Swedish and PSE-Operator for the Polish part of the cable.

Since coming online, 11 instances of cable damage have occurred: one on the high voltage line and 10 on the return cable. Causes have included ship anchors, fishing nets, fire, and grid power disturbances. On 14 February 2005, the smoothing reactor at the HVDC station at Bruskowo Wielkie was destroyed by fire. Repairs took 20 hours.

Initially SwePol was used to export electricity to Poland only.

From January to October 2020 Poland exported 1,225.9 GWh of electricity and imported 12,573.1 GWh compared to 872.8 GWh and 9,326.7 GWh in the same period 2019. The largest import was from Germany 3,222.2 GWh, Sweden 3,195.9 GWh and the Czech Republic 2,561.5 GW.[2] Poland's power market will face a supply squeeze from 2025, when a tightening of EU rules on plants’ CO2 emissions will force nearly 5 GW of thermal capacity out of the system, the nation's TSO has warned.[3]

When the Nord Stream gas pipeline, also in the Baltic Sea, began to leak in September 2022 and sabotage was suspected, many people feared that the SwePol link had also been damaged. Tests by Svenska Kraftnät, published on 4 October the same year, indicated that was not the case.[4]

  1. ^ "SwePol Link sets new environmental standard for HVDC transmission" (PDF).
  2. ^ "Import prądu do Polski przekroczył już wartość za cały 2019 rok" (in Polish). 18 October 2014. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Poland faces power supply squeeze after 2025 – TSO". 10 December 2014. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
  4. ^ Johan Zachrisson Winberg, Johan Wikén (4 October 2022). "Polenkabeln oskadd efter Nord Stream-läckorna" (in Swedish). SVT Nyheter. Retrieved 4 October 2022.