This comes after the Republic raised its low-carbon electricity import target to 6 GW by 2035, up from an initial target of 4 GW set in 2021
[SINGAPORE] The subsidiaries of Sembcorp Industries and state-owned utilities company Sarawak Energy have entered an agreement with Prysmian for a hydropower project that could supply Singapore with 1 gigawatt (GW) of green electricity from the Malaysian state, Sembcorp said in a bourse filing on Wednesday (Mar 19).
The preferred supplier agreement is between Sembcorp Utilities, Sarawak Energy Services and Prysmian, an Italian subsea cable maker that produces high-voltage submarine and underground cable systems.
It also involves technical partner SP PowerInterconnect, a subsidiary of Singapore’s state-owned utilities company SP Group that specialises in the development and operation of cross-border electricity interconnectors.
Sembcorp said that the parties will work on optimising the design, installation methodology and protection requirements for a subsea interconnector cable.
The potential import of an estimated 1 GW of green electricity from Sarawak to Singapore is subject to regulatory approvals.
Last September, Singapore raised its low-carbon electricity import target to 6 GW by 2035, up from an initial target of 4 GW set in 2021.
Sembcorp shares closed S$0.05 or 0.8 per cent lower at S$6.15 on Wednesday, before the announcement.
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