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    How Sun Cable could be a loser, yet a winner

    Hans van Leeuwen
    Hans van LeeuwenEurope correspondent
    Updated

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    London | Mike Cannon-Brookes’ Sun Cable will be pipped to the post in the race to lay a 4000-kilometre cable to send solar energy out of the desert and under the oceans. But the British company set to finish first says its project could kickstart the industry worldwide.

    Xlinks has a £20 billion-plus ($39 billion) plan to lay its own 4000-kilometre cable that will hook up an 11.5-gigawatt Moroccan solar and onshore wind farm to the south-west coast of England, supplying 3.6 gigawatts into the British electricity grid by the early 2030s.

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