Danilo,
If you need those 160 MVA all in the same area (a factory, an industrial area?) in my opinion the best solution, from both the technical and economic point of view, is to deliver the power you need with 220 kV line(s) and then to install 220 kV transformers nearby the loads, choosing low voltage according to local practice (reasonably something between 33 and 15 kV). This would reduce transmission lines cost and losses and avoids installation of 220/66kV transformers, with their cost and reliability issues.
Even if the distance between the 220 kV network and the load is 80 km you should consider that maximum transmissible power is a theoretical value, corresponding to an unammisbile voltage drop (it is the limit for voltage collapse), so you have to provide a substantial safety margin.
In order to make a proper preliminary hypotesis you shall account for maximum voltage drop along the line (as waross said) and for reactive power absorption at connection point.
Just for a comparison, the practice in the utility I work for is to connect industrial loads and generating plants between 10 and 100 MVA on the 132kV or 150 kV network and those over100 MVA on the 220 or 400 kV network.
Si duri puer ingeni videtur,
preconem facias vel architectum.