The EU will lend 600 million euros ($694.5 million) and offer a 90 million euro grant to Egypt for the modernization and expansion of its electricity grid, the Commission said in a statement on Monday.
The loan represents the first flagship operation through the Trans-Mediterranean Renewable Energy and Clean Tech Cooperation, or T-MED.
The project will advance the aims of the EU-Egypt Strategic and Comprehensive Partnership, the statement said.
It will enable Egypt to integrate 22 gigawatts of renewables into its grid by 2030 and to upgrade substations and transmission lines in the Red Sea and Gulf of Suez regions, improving grid reliability and efficiency.
Total investments, including those disbursed by Europe, will amount to an estimated 1.6 billion euros in public and private investment, the statement said.
The upgrades will also promote the transition away from fossil fuels in Egypt, aligning with the country's own 2040 goalposts for this and provide business opportunities for European companies in grid infrastructure and clean energy.
The upgrades will start next year and the first renewable energy resulting from it is expected by 2028, the statement said.