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Economic Development

Plan to connect Africa to Devon village via world's longest subsea cable

Former Tesco boss is behind Xlink's £16bn plan to take solar and wind energy from Morocco to º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Alverdiscott Methodist Church, in the tiny North Devon village(Image: Google)

A £16bn project is being worked on which will see the world’s longest undersea cable bring electricity from North Africa to a tiny village in North Devon.

The envisages enough sun- and wind-generated energy being imported to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to supply seven million homes by 2030.

The plan would see 3,800km of subsea cabling connect Morocco's renewable energy-rich Guelmim Oued Noun region with little Alverdiscott, near Barnstaple.

More on the South West's green revolution

A new electricity generation facility, entirely powered by solar and wind energy combined with a battery storage facility, would cover about 1,500sq km in Morocco and then be connected exclusively to Britain via four HVDC (high voltage direct current) sub-sea cables.

These would plug into Alverdiscott, population 286, which would host two 1.8GW connections. Agreement has already been reached with National Grid for voltage source convertor stations to be set up in Alverdiscott.

Convertor stations in Morocco will change the HVAC (high voltage alternating current) power at the generation site to HVDC, which is then sent through the subsea cable before a converter station in North Devon changes the HVDC back to HVAC, ready to be injected into the British transmission network. A technical feasibility study has already been completed to validate the reliability and cost of the project.

Former Tesco boss Sir Dave Lewis is behind the plan, via his London-based start-up company Xlinks. Mr Lewis is also raising £800m to build three º£½ÇÊÓÆµ production facilities to tap into growing demand for the electric cables used for offshore wind farms and undersea interconnectors.

Xlinks said: “This ‘first of a kind’ project will generate 10.5GW of zero carbon electricity from the sun and wind to deliver 3.6GW of reliable energy for an average of 20+ hours a day.