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KSA taps the sun to meet a third of its energy needs

Solar-energy club boosted by Saudi Arabia’s entry
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CALINE MALEK
July 05, 2019

  • The International Solar Alliance is a network of 122 "sun-rich" countries
  • Agreement to join ISA was signed during the Crown Prince's tour of India in February
DUBAI: Saudi Arabia is expected to play a significant role in the future of solar energy following an agreement it signed with an inter-governmental organization that has its headquarters outside Delhi in India.

The International Solar Alliance (ISA) is a network of 122 “sun-rich” countries that the Kingdom joined during Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s tour of India earlier this year. Most of the countries lie either completely or partly between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn.

Countries that do not fall within the Tropics can join the ISA and enjoy all benefits as other members, with the exception of voting rights.

The ISA was launched jointly by the prime ministers of India and France in Paris in 2015 on the sidelines of COP21, the UN climate conference.

Its primary objective is to work for efficient exploitation of solar energy to reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

Its activities are aimed, among other things, at ramping up solar energy applications in agriculture, mini-grids and rooftops; financing; e-mobility and storage; and supporting solar technologies.

“The ISA welcomes the Kingdom’s signature on the framework agreement,” Upendra Tripathy, head of the ISA, told Arab News, referring to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.

SOLAR TECHNOLOGY
• Photovoltaic systems - Semiconductor materials (such as thin-film solar cells) absorb sunlight, creating a reaction that generates electricity for use in everything from calculators to large utilities.

• Solar-thermal power - Arrays of reflectors focus the sun’s heat onto devices that produce electricity.

• Solar water heating systems - Flat-plate collectors mounted on building rooftops heat up a fluid contained in tubes; the heat is transmitted to water in a storage tank or a swimming pool.

• Passive solar heating - Uses materials such as sunlit floors and walls that absorb heat during the day and releases it at night.

“The decades of experience in energy policy, infrastructure, investment and financing that Saudi Arabia will bring on board will be incredibly valuable for ISA members. This will help member countries to promote solar-energy deployment and implement the Paris accord.”

The Paris accord is an agreement within the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, dealing with the reduction of greenhouse-gas-emissions, which was signed in 2016.

“As a prominent member of OPEC, Saudi Arabia has always played a major role in global energy markets,” Tripathy told Arab News. “The Saudi government is now sending a clear message to the global community that it can play a prominent role in the future of solar energy.”

Experts say that the Saudi renewable-energy market is the largest in the Middle East, with massive capacity expansion, amounting to almost 16 gigawatts, expected to happen in the coming years.

“From what we can see in the Kingdom’s approach, the ambition is much bigger than just ensuring that a part of the internal consumption of electricity is generated by renewables,” said Yousif Al-Ali, acting executive director of clean energy at Abu Dhabi’s Masdar, which has been chosen by Saudi Arabia to develop its first commercial wind project.

“The Saudis have plans to be an exporter of clean energy to their neighboring countries. The Kingdom has all that is required to undertake such projects successfully and sustainably, namely sufficient acreage, very good resources of solar and wind energy, the right legislation, and a system that attracts very competitive finance and equity. So Saudi Arabia is well positioned to compete in this market.”

For his part, Tripathy noted that because Saudi Arabia is rich in both oil and solar energy resources, an optimium energy mix will not only maximize the Kingdom’s revenues but also reduce its carbon footprint and conserve its hydrocarbon resources.

“By boosting its investment in solar energy, Saudi Arabia can lead by example for other Gulf Cooperation Council countries,” he told Arab News. At the same time, he said, “the Kingdom can earmark part of its bilateral aid for supporting the adoption of solar technologies by other developing countries.”

With Saudi Arabia’s entry, according to Tripathy, the ISA will form a partnership with the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB), which is headquartered in Jeddah, to expand investments in solar power in the bank’s member countries.

“The ISA has a unique role in facilitating implementation of solar projects in member countries,” he said.

“In the past two years of operations, the ISA has assumed the role of an ‘enabler’ by helping to set up 30 fellowships for the member countries at a premier engineering institution (IIT Delhi) in the host country, and by training 200 master trainers from ISA member countries.”

The ISA also plays the role of a “facilitator” by arranging bank credit from India and France. In addition, it strives to boost investments in solar projects by acting as an incubator. The role involves nurturing initiatives such as the Common Risk Mitigation Mechanism (CRMM), which has mobilized $1 million for the purpose of reducing the cost of solar projects in member countries.

According to estimates, more than $100 billion in investments are needed by 2030 for massive deployment of solar applications.

While solar energy has a bright future in Saudi Arabia, a number of challenges, notably its intermittent nature, have to be overcome.

“The storage and pricing is a challenge,” Masdar’s Al-Ali told Arab News. “The price of solar energy from storage devices is still three to four times the price of electricity that comes directly from photovoltaic (PV) cells during the day time. This is an area where I believe the market will evolve. We are also seeing huge reductions in the price of storage batteries, driven by the automobile industry. The trend is predicted to continue.”

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Echoing Al-Ali’s remarks about the industry, Kyle Weber, founder of Evera, a transporation-focused energy company founded in Dubai in 2017, said limited energy-storage capacity is the biggest hurdle in the path of the Middle East’s transition to renewables.

“While the heat, dust and humidity may make solar less efficient in the Gulf region than in other parts of the world, there is sufficient sun to generate a significant amount of electricity or thermal energy,” he said.

Weber said the business opportunities that could be unlocked by Saudi Arabia’s admission to the ISA cannot be overestimated. “Once seen as a very conservative and closed-off society, it is now attracting an incredible amount of attention,” he said.

“The decision to be a part of the ISA further reinforces the commitment of the Kingdom to joining the international community,” he said. “Saudi Arabia, like most Gulf countries, realizes that it can no longer continue to be a solely oil-driven economy and must diversify to something else, or risk being left behind.

“This ISA move represents a truly positive change for the country and its people and is extremely exciting for businesses like ours, who see the market opening up.”

The experts said Saudi Arabia’s decision needs to be seen in the context of international resolve to adopt measures to mitigate climate change. “We need to create efficiency in all our systems,” Al-Ali said. “Today, renewables make sense in addition to its environmental impact and the reduction in carbon footprint. It’s economical to have renewable energy projects.”

The price of electricity from solar energy today is far below that derived from conventional sources, a development that bodes well for the future of countries such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia, which have a large number of power plants.

“These projects create jobs and support social growth,” Al-Ali said. “Renewable energy can play a role in creating jobs in places where other industries cannot.”

Looking to the future, Weber said: “Amazing projects, such as Neom, give me hope for the future in Saudi Arabia. In the solar sector specifically, there is incredible potential for a Gulf Cooperation Council grid.

“This will allow countries to buy and sell clean energy to one another to increase efficiency and stabilize the grid, and also to be able to cope with a wide range of renewable inputs, which generally fluctuate with the weather.”

In the final analysis, Weber said: “We are marching towards a climate change end game that appears extremely bleak. But I have faith that Saudi Arabia, the region and the whole world can make the necessary changes to avoid a climate catastrophe.”

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1521261/saudi-arabia
 

Saudi Arabia to establish largest solar panel plant in Arab World


Date

7/15/2019 10:59:58 AM
(MENAFN) The Saudi Industrial Development Fund (SIDF) has signed an agreement in Riyadh with alternative energy source Masdar to finance the construction of a solar panel plant at the Third Industrial City in Dammam, eastern Saudi Arabia.

Majid Al-MBTI, Chairman of Masdar, said that the project is in line with the vision of Saudi Arabia 2030 and the aspirations of the Crown Prince, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, to invest in solar energy and transfer technology knowledge to diversify energy sources across the Kingdom.

"The project is worth about SR 100 million (USD26.6 million) and is the largest plant in the Middle East specialized in manufacturing solar panels." According to the operational plan and the program, the plant will be able to produce by the end of this year.

He pointed out that Masdar has a strategic partnership with a Chinese company which is one of the top five companies in the world in this field, adding that the company's Chinese partnership in the project is about 20 percent.

https://menafn.com/1098759164/Saudi-Arabia-to-establish-largest-solar-panel-plant-in-Arab-World


by Utilities Middle East staffAug 02, 2019

Saudi Arabia Invites Bids For $1.4bn Solar PV Projects With A Combined Capacity Of 1.47GW
The Renewable Energy Project Development Office (REPDO) issues Request for Proposals (RFP) for Round Two of the National Renewable Energy Program (NREP) that consists of six solar PV projects. 60 companies pre-qualified to bid, 28 of which are from Saudi Arabia
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The Renewable Energy Project Development Office (REPDO) of Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Energy, Industry and Mineral Resources (MEIM) has issued the RFPs for Round Two of the Kingdom’s National Renewable Energy Program (NREP).

The RFP for two ‘Category A’ projects was issued today, August 1st, following the issuance of RFP for four ‘Category B’ solar projects on July 18th. The six Round Two projects will see a total solar PV capacity of 1.47 gigawatts (GW) tendered to qualified companies.

In June 2019, REPDO qualified 60 companies, including 28 from Saudi Arabia. Qualified companies will now proceed to the RFP stage as either managing member, technical member, or under a newly-created category of ‘local managing member’. This new category will encourage greater local and international partnerships during the forming of bidding consortiums.


Round Two projects have been divided into two categories: ‘Category A’ for smaller projects and ‘Category B’ for larger projects. ‘Category A’ projects require consortium members to partner with at least one local managing member.

Projects within Round Two will carry a minimum requirement of 17% local content as calculated by the mechanisms defined by the Local Content & Government Procurement Authority (LCGPA), which aims to increase the value-added contribution of products and services in the national economy.

The six projects being tendered within Round Two represent the first half of REPDO’s 2019 project development pipeline. A further six projects will be tendered by the last quarter of the year and will constitute Round Three of the NREP.


Proposals for Round Two ‘Category B’ projects must be submitted by 18 November 2019, and the deadline for ‘Category A’ projects is 3 December 2019. Results of all bids will be live-streamed on REPDO’s eProcurement portal: www.powersaudiarabia.com . All projects tendered by REPDO are 100% IPPs that will be backed by 20 to 25-year power purchase agreements.

https://www.utilities-me.com/news/1...pv-projects-with-a-combined-capacity-of-147gw
 
This Planned Solar Farm in Saudi Arabia Would Be 100 Times Bigger Than Any in the World

By
Thomas Hornigold
-
Apr 03, 2018

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Right now it only exists on paper, in the form of a memorandum of understanding. But if constructed, the newly-announced solar photovoltaic project in Saudi Arabia would break an astonishing array of records. It’s larger than any solar project currently planned by a factor of 100. When completed, nominally in 2030, it would have a capacity of an astonishing 200 gigawatts (GW). The project is backed by Softbank Group and Saudi Arabia’s new crown prince, Mohammed Bin Salman, and was announced in New York on March 27.

The Tengger Desert Solar Park in China, affectionately known as the “Great Wall of Solar,” is the world’s largest operating solar farm, with a capacity of 1.5 GW. Larger farms are under construction, including the Westlands Solar Park, which plans to finish with 2.7 GW of capacity. But even those that are only in the planning phases are dwarfed by the Saudi project; two early-stage solar parkswill have capacity of 7.2 GW, and the plan involves them generating electricity as early as next year.

It makes more sense to compare to slightly larger projects, like nations, or even planets. Saudi Arabia’s current electricity generation capacity is 77 GW. This project would almost triple it. The current total solar photovoltaic generation capacity installed worldwide is 303 GW. In other words, this single solar farm would account for a similar installed capacity as the entire world’s capacity in 2015, and over a thousand times more than we had in 2000.

That’s exponential growth for you, folks.

Of course, practically doubling the world’s solar capacity doesn’t come cheap; the nominal estimate for the budget is around $200 billion (compared to $20 billion for around half a gigawatt of fusion, though, it may not seem so bad.) But the project would help solve a number of pressing problems for Saudi Arabia.

For a start, solar power works well in the desert. The irradiance is high, you have plenty of empty space, and peak demand is driven by air conditioning in the cities and so corresponds with peak supply. Even if oil companies might seem blasé about the global supply of oil running out, individual countries are aware that their own reserves won’t last forever, and they don’t want to miss the energy transition. The country’s Vision 2030 project aims to diversify its heavily oil-dependent economy by that year. If they can construct solar farms on this scale, alongside the $80 billion the government plans to spend on a fleet of nuclear reactors, it seems logical to export that power to other countries in the region, especially given the amount of energy storage that would be required otherwise.

We’ve already discussed a large-scale project to build solar panels in the desert then export the electricity: the DESERTEC initiative in the Sahara. Although DESERTEC planned a range of different demonstration plants on scales of around 500 MW, its ultimate ambition was to “provide 20 percent of Europe’s electricity by 2050.” It seems that this project is similar in scale to what they were planning. Weaning ourselves off fossil fuels is going to be incredibly difficult. Only large-scale nuclear, wind, or solar can really supply the world’s energy needs if consumption is anything like what it is today; in all likelihood, we’ll need a combination of all three.

To make a sizeable contribution to that effort, the renewable projects have to be truly epic in scale. The planned 2 GW solar park at Bulli Creek in Australiawould cover 5 square kilometers, so it’s not unreasonable to suggest that, across many farms, this project could cover around 500 square kilometers—around the size of Chicago.

It will come as no surprise that Softbank is involved in this project. The founder, Masayoshi Son, is well-known for large-scale “visionary” investments. This is suggested by the name of his $100 billion VC fund, the Softbank Vision Fund, and the focus of its investments. It has invested millions of dollars in tech companies like Uber, IoT, NVIDIA and ARM, and startups across fields like VR, agritech, and AI.

Of course, Softbank is also the company that bought infamous robot-makers Boston Dynamics from Google when their not-at-all-sinister “Project Replicant” was sidelined. Softbank is famous in Japan in part due to their mascot, Pepper, which is probably the most widespread humanoid robot on the planet. Suffice it to say that Softbank is keen to be a part of any technological development, and they’re not afraid of projects that are truly vast in scope.

Since the Fukushima disaster in 2011 led Japan to turn away from nuclear power, Son has also been focused on green electricity, floating the idea of an Asia Super Grid. Similar to DESERTEC, it aims to get around the main issues with renewable energy (the land use and the intermittency of supply) with a vast super-grid that would connect Mongolia, India, Japan, China, Russia, and South Korea with high-voltage DC power cables. “Since this is such a grandiose project, many people told me it is crazy,” Son said. “They said it is impossible both economically and politically.” The first stage of the project, a demonstration wind farm of 50 megawatts in Mongolia, began operating in October of last year.

Given that Saudi Arabia put up $45 billion of the Vision Fund, it’s also not surprising to see the location of the project; Softbank reportedly had plans to invest $25 billion of the Vision Fund in Saudi Arabia, and $1 billion will be spent on the first solar farms there. Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, 32, who recently consolidated power, is looking to be seen on the global stage as a modernizer. He was effusive about the project. “It’s a huge step in human history,” he said. “It’s bold, risky, and we hope we succeed doing that.”

It is the risk that will keep renewable energy enthusiasts concerned.

Every visionary plan contains the potential for immense disappointment. As yet, the Asian Super Grid and the Saudi power plan are more or less at the conceptual stage. The fact that a memorandum of understanding exists between the Saudi government and Softbank is no guarantee that it will ever be built. Some analysts in the industry are a little skeptical.

“It’s an unprecedented construction effort; it’s an unprecedented financing effort,” said Benjamin Attia, a global solar analyst for Green Tech Media Research. “But there are so many questions, so few details, and a lot of headwinds, like grid instability, the availability of commercial debt, construction, and logistics challenges.”

We have already seen with the DESERTEC initiative that these vast-scale renewable energy projects can fail, despite immense enthusiasm. They are not easy to accomplish. But in a world without fossil fuels, they will be required. This project could be a flagship example for how to run a country on renewable energy—or another example of grand designs and good intentions. We’ll have to wait to find out which.

https://singularityhub.com/2018/04/...ld-be-100-times-bigger-than-any-in-the-world/
 
As the sun sets on oil, the sun will rise on solar power

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Saudi Arabia has just invited bids for a series of massive solar-energy projects as it starts to ramp up its commitment to renewable-energy targets outlined under the country’s Vision 2030 plan. [VALDRIN XHEMAJ/EPA-EFE]

As the sun sets on oil, the sun will rise on solar power


DISCLAIMER: All opinions in this column reflect the views of the author(s), not of EURACTIV.COM Ltd.

By Jonathan Gornall | Syndication Bureau

8:11

Saudi_solar.jpg

Saudi Arabia has just invited bids for a series of massive solar-energy projects as it starts to ramp up its commitment to renewable-energy targets outlined under the country’s Vision 2030 plan. [VALDRIN XHEMAJ/EPA-EFE]

Comments

When shares in Saudi Aramco eventually go public, there will doubtless be a feeding frenzy on what promises to be the largest initial public offering ever seen. More significantly, the move would also signal Saudi Arabia’s recognition that sunset for fossil fuel is just over the horizon, writes Jonathan Gornall.

Jonathan Gornall is a British journalist, formerly with The Times, who has lived and worked in the Middle East and is now based in the UK.

There was a distinct lack of crucial financial detail, so it wasn’t the world’s most conventional investor relations call. But when the world’s biggest oil producer this month offered a tantalising glimpse behind the veil of secrecy that normally conceals its activities, it may also have raised the curtain on the last act of the fossil fuels era.

It’s been three years since Saudi Aramco first announced it was planning to go public. Since then, the plan has been on and off again several times, but now it seems to be back on again. If, as Saudi energy minister Khalid Al Falih has suggested, Aramco shares are floated on the market at some point in the next year and a half, it promises to be the largest initial public offering ever seen.

This company, owned outright by the Saudi government, is gigantic. In 2018 it made a net profit of $111.1 billion, making it almost twice as big as Apple, the world’s most profitable publicly quoted company, and dwarfing the profitability of each of the other major oil companies. On August 12, the company revealed its income for the first half of 2019 had fallen by 12% to $47 billion, a drop blamed on a dip in the price of crude, but Aramco remains easily the world’s most profitable company.

So why, then, is Saudi Arabia looking to offer outsiders a slice of the action?

The most plausible explanation is that, 86 years after Saudi Arabia signed the concession agreement with a US oil company that led to the creation of the Arabia American Oil Company and 39 years since the government increased its stake in Aramco to 100%, it realises that sunset for fossil fuel is just over the horizon.

On one level, this is terrific news for a planet facing irreversible harm from the impact of fossil-fuel consumption. Saudi Arabia is the largest producer of crude oil in the world and analysts believe it plans to use the billions, if not trillions, of dollars an IPO would yield partly to finance ambitious plans to wean the country off dependence upon oil and to develop a significant renewable-energy sector.

But a planned IPO signals that all that Saudi oil is not likely to be staying in the ground. Quite how much oil Saudi Arabia is sitting on has always been uncertain. But in January, in a move to improve transparency before offering shares, Aramco released details of the first independent audit of the country’s oil reserves. It confirmed that, with 263.1 billion untapped barrels at the end of 2017, Saudi Arabia has the world’s largest reserves of crude. Similarly, the company’s first and massively oversubscribed international bond issue three months later, which raised $12 billion, was designed to test the appetite and pave the way for an IPO.

Objective achieved. Global investors are raring to go and when shares do finally go on sale, there will doubtless be an unrestrained feeding frenzy.

Of course, none of these potential investors is unaware of the growing environmental pressure on oil and the simultaneous growth in interest and investment in renewable energy sources, which together limit Aramco’s long-term prospects. But they also know there is still a short-term fortune to be made from oil and gas and they will be ruthless in their determination to squeeze every possible cent of profit from every drop before the curtain finally falls on the fossil-fuel era.

Regardless of all of that, this is a pivotal moment in the global switch from fossil fuels to alternative sources of energy. It signals Saudi Arabia’s recognition that oil is dying and that it is better to reap a huge dividend from the sale of that asset now rather than watch income steadily diminish until the stock is worthless. It is also likely to stimulate similar strategic thinking among Saudi Arabia’s oil-producing neighbours, who may well accelerate their own efforts to simultaneously maximise profits and reduce reliance upon oil in favour of going all-out to develop significant renewables sectors.

It is no coincidence, then, that Saudi Arabia has just invited bids for a series of massive solar-energy projects as it starts to ramp up its commitment to renewable-energy targets outlined under the country’s Vision 2030 plan. Although it is falling in price, solar infrastructure remains expensive and vast investment is required – investment that could easily be funded by an IPO.


On one level, this is terrific news for a planet facing irreversible harm from the impact of fossil-fuel consumption. Saudi Arabia is the largest producer of crude oil in the world and analysts believe it plans to use the billions, if not trillions, of dollars an IPO would yield partly to finance ambitious plans to wean the country off dependence upon oil and to develop a significant renewable-energy sector.

But a planned IPO signals that all that Saudi oil is not likely to be staying in the ground. Quite how much oil Saudi Arabia is sitting on has always been uncertain. But in January, in a move to improve transparency before offering shares, Aramco released details of the first independent audit of the country’s oil reserves. It confirmed that, with 263.1 billion untapped barrels at the end of 2017, Saudi Arabia has the world’s largest reserves of crude. Similarly, the company’s first and massively oversubscribed international bond issue three months later, which raised $12 billion, was designed to test the appetite and pave the way for an IPO.

Objective achieved. Global investors are raring to go and when shares do finally go on sale, there will doubtless be an unrestrained feeding frenzy.

Of course, none of these potential investors is unaware of the growing environmental pressure on oil and the simultaneous growth in interest and investment in renewable energy sources, which together limit Aramco’s long-term prospects. But they also know there is still a short-term fortune to be made from oil and gas and they will be ruthless in their determination to squeeze every possible cent of profit from every drop before the curtain finally falls on the fossil-fuel era.

Regardless of all of that, this is a pivotal moment in the global switch from fossil fuels to alternative sources of energy. It signals Saudi Arabia’s recognition that oil is dying and that it is better to reap a huge dividend from the sale of that asset now rather than watch income steadily diminish until the stock is worthless. It is also likely to stimulate similar strategic thinking among Saudi Arabia’s oil-producing neighbours, who may well accelerate their own efforts to simultaneously maximise profits and reduce reliance upon oil in favour of going all-out to develop significant renewables sectors.

It is no coincidence, then, that Saudi Arabia has just invited bids for a series of massive solar-energy projects as it starts to ramp up its commitment to renewable-energy targets outlined under the country’s Vision 2030 plan. Although it is falling in price, solar infrastructure remains expensive and vast investment is required – investment that could easily be funded by an IPO.

https://www.euractiv.com/section/en...sets-on-oil-the-sun-will-rise-on-solar-power/
 
Saudi energy ministry appoints new head of renewables development

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Jennifer Gnana
Sep 6, 2019

Faisal Al Yemni will head the office tasked with installing 27.3GW of clean energy capacity by 2024

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Riyadh has been moving away from burning hydrocarbons for power generation as it looks to free up its crude for the export market. Reuters
Saudi Arabia's energy ministry has appointed Faisal Al Yemni as head of its renewable energy project development office (Repdo), as the world's largest oil exporter looks to add cleaner sources of power to its energy mix.

Mr Al Yemni will be tasked with executing the country's National Renewable Energy Programme, which looks to install around 60 Gigawatts of clean energy capacity by 2030. Of this, 40GW will come from solar photovoltaic, 16GW from wind and 2.7GW from concentrated solar power.

Saudi Arabia invites bids for six solar energy projects

Saudi Arabia to become biggest regional wind power market

Mr Al Yemni, who was previously chief executive at GCC Assets Investment and Development Company, has 15 years of experience in renewables power as well as across the oil and gas value chain.

Riyadh has been moving away from burning crude to generate power, switching to gas-fired power plants and is now looking at renewables, as it seeks to free up its crude for the export market.

Saudi Arabia recently revised its renewable energy target from 9.5GW to 27.3GW to be achieved by 2024.

Around 70 per cent of renewable schemes in the kingdom will be executed by the sovereign Public Investment Fund, while the remainder will be awarded through Repdo.

Saudi Arabia last month invited 60 prequalified companies to submit bids for six solar energy schemes that have a combined capacity of 1.5GW. The Saudi energy ministry expects the schemes to attract around $1.4 billion in investment to its private sector. Another six projects, in round three of the National Renewable Energy Programme, will be tendered by the last quarter of the year.

Saudi Arabia last year awarded the kingdom's first utility-scale solar PV plant to Riyadh-based Acwa Power for a record low tariff of US Cents 2.3417/kWh (8.781 halalas/kWh).

The US$302 million Sakaka plant will be developed on the basis of an independent power producer model and is backed by a 25-year power purchase agreement with the Saudi Power Procurement Company.

Saudi Arabia is also set to become the Middle East's biggest wind power market in the next decade. The kingdom will account for almost half of the region's wind capacity additions by 2028.

Developers will build 6.2GW of wind capacity – or 46 per cent of the region’s total wind capacity addition – between 2019 and 2028, according to Wood Mackenzie Power & Renewables.

The kingdom's first wind power project, costing $500m reached a financial close in July. The 400-MW wind farm is being executed by a consortium led by France’s EDF and Masdar.

https://www.thenational.ae/business...s-new-head-of-renewables-development-1.907087
 
Saudi Arabia launches $28 billion renewable energy funding initiative
October 1, 2019
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Saudi Arabia has commenced a renewable energy development programme offering loans for clean energy projects and the manufacturers of renewable energy components, according to a report by Reuters.

The $28 billion Saudi Industrial Development Fund’s Mtujadeda programme is expected to help the emirate move from its dependence on crude oil, towards other diversified energy sources.

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Saudi Arabi has traditionally relied on crude oil to fuel it’s electricity needs but wants to include more natural gas and other clean energy alternatives.

The programme opened for applications on Sunday, and will offer loans as high as 1.2 billion riyals, depending on the applicant company’s ownership status, and will target independent power production projects.

The programmes will also support firms in other sectors in the region that want to start using renewable energy.

“Whether you’re in manufacturing, agriculture or retail, if you want to deploy renewable energy, we will finance it,” said Ibrahim Almojel, the fund’s director general. "For renewables to be adopted in the kingdom, we need to support it.”

“Our objective is really to find new sources of energy to be less dependent on oil and to enable the manufacturing sector to continue its progress,” said Ahmed AlGwaiz, the industrial fund’s vice president of risk management, adding that the loans will be available for Saudi or foreign-owned companies. “We treat all clients, as long as they’re in Saudi Arabia, the same.”

The fund has already entered into dialogue with “large retailers and large agriculture producers” interested in using renewable energy, according to Almojel.

The fund, which was started in 1979, is being reworked by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, to suit his plan for life after oil, dubbed Vision 2030, and was also recently expanded to allow for the financing of energy, logistics and mining projects.

https://www.smart-energy.com/indust...-billion-renewable-energy-funding-initiative/

 
Saudi Aramco and Acwa Power to develop $3bn LNG terminal and power plant in Bangladesh

20 OCTOBER 2019

Saudi Aramco and Saudi utilities developer Acwa Power have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Bangladesh government to develop a $3bn liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal and power plant in the South Asian country.

Acwa Power’s chairman Mohammad Abunayyan was reported as saying the $3bn direct investment would be made by 2020. The project will be Acwa Power’s largest gas-to-power project and the first partnership with Saudi Aramco for such a scheme.

The LNG terminal will be developed in either the Moheshkhali area of Cox’s Bazar or at Payra port. The power plant is planned to have a generation capacity of 3,600MW.

Acwa Power’s CEO and president Paddy Padmanathan recently told MEED that the developer was targeting the growing global demand for LNG and gas-to-power as an additional area of growth.

“I can see us getting involved in gas, in LNG,” said the CEO. “We are looking at some opportunities for gas-to-power that will require us to not only look at the power plant but the infrastructure bringing the LNG to a port, to either floating or fixed LNG terminals or through pipelines.”

https://www.meed.com/aramco-acwa-power-plant-bangladesh/


 
Race Heats Up For Title Of Cheapest Solar Energy In The World

Dominic Dudley Contributor
Oct 17, 2019, 12:21pm

Dubai has narrowly missed out on reclaiming the title of having the world’s cheapest solar photovoltaic (PV) energy, after receiving bids for the latest phase of a massive solar park on the desert outskirts of the city.

Saudi Arabia’s Acwa Power submitted a tariff of just 1.6953 U.S. cents per kilowatt hour (kWh) for the 900MW fifth phase of Dubai’s Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum (MBR) Solar Park, according to a report by the Middle East Economic Digest. That sets a new record for unsubsidized solar PV production, in the region at least. However, it is still a little way short of the 1.654 cents/kWh achieved in Portugal earlier this year.


The Dubai authorities have delighted in repeatedly setting new records for previous phases of the MBR Solar Park and they may be disappointed to have fallen just short this time. A carefully-worded statement from the government-owned utility, DEWA, earlier this week claimed they had, however, set a new world record for a PV solar plant based on the independent power producer (IPP) model.

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A field of solar photovoltaic panels that form part of the Mohammed bin Rashid Solar Park in Dubai, ... [+]

DOMINIC DUDLEY

The MBR Solar Park is designed to be the largest single-site solar power facility in the world and will have a total capacity of 5GW by 2030. It is only four years since it was set up, but its short history shows just how quickly solar energy prices have tumbled.

In 2015 the first phase of the facility was launched, with a 200MW PV solar plant developed for a then-record tariff of 5.85 cents/kWh. A new record was set for the second, 200MW phase at 5.6 cents/kWh. In June 2016, that benchmark was beaten for the 800MW third phase, with a price of 2.99 cents/kWh – the first time a solar project had come in under 3 cents/kWh.


The fourth phase of the park saw the price drop again, to 2.4 cents/kWh for the 250MW PV element – a further 700MW in that phase is based on more expensive solar technologies including Concentrated Solar Power.

In between these events, others have briefly claimed the mantle of having the cheapest solar power. In early 2017, for example, Abu Dhabi secured a tariff of 2.42 cents/kWh for the Sweihan solar PV project. And in February last year, Saudi Arabia handed a contract to Acwa Power to develop a 300MW PV project for a tariff of 2.342 cents/kWh.

If anything, the pace of change is speeding up. In June this year, a 400MW project in Los Angeles was agreed at 1.997 cents/kWh, breaking through the 2 cents level for the first time. That was eclipsed within days by an even cheaperscheme in Brazil priced at 1.75 cents/kWh.

And that price was then bettered in Portugal in July, when the Direcção-Geral de Energia e Geologia awarded a series of contracts to provide 1.15GW of solar energy. Within that, 150MW was secured for a price of just €0.01476/kWh, equivalent to 1.654 cents/kWh.

The results underline the fact that solar energy is now becoming cost-competitive with conventional forms of energy in markets around the world. A recent study covering 344 cities in China, published in Nature, found that in all cases unsubsidized solar PV was cheaper than electricity supplied through the grid.

Often, the low prices are being secured by the use of reverse auctions. "This July's auction [in Portugal] is, by a distance, the lowest-cost contract awarded through a public auction in Europe and gives a measure of solar PV’s increasing economic competitiveness in the region,” said Tom Heggarty, senior research analyst at Wood Mackenzie, following the results of the Portuguese auction.

Industry eyes will now turn to other parts of the Middle East. At the end of October, developers are due to submit proposals for a 2GW solar project in Abu Dhabi and before the year is out, bids are also due in for 1.47GW of solar power projects in Saudi Arabia.

Whether or not Abu Dhabi or Riyadh manage to reclaim the prize of having the lowest cost, they are unlikely to hold on to it for long, as more countries plan ever more solar energy schemes.

Portugal is planning another auction in January 2020, for 700MW of solar power. In the longer-term, the country is planning to have between 8.1GW and 9.9GW of solar PV capacity in place by 2030, up from just 689MW at the end of last year. That will allow it to meet 80% of its total power demand from clean energy generation.

That is in line with trends elsewhere in Europe and around the world. Ireland is planning to have 65% of its energy needs met by non-hydro renewable power by 2030, while Chile is aiming for 50% by that date. Tumbling costs will surely encourage more govenments to set even more ambitious targets.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/domini...apest-solar-energy-in-the-world/#238c60fa4772


Acwa Power wins 250MW solar energy deal in Ethiopia


Saudi Arabia’s Acwa Power has been awarded a contract to develop two photovoltaic (PV) solar projects with a total capacity of 250MW in Ethiopia.

Solar power in Ethiopia
Ethiopia’s public-private partnership (PPP) board, in conjunction with the country’s Finance Ministry, has approved Acwa Power’s tariff of $2.5 cents per kilowatt-hour to develop the Gad and Dicheto solar independent power producer (IPP) projects at sites in the Somali and Afar regions respectively.

Acwa Power saw off competition from four other bidders to win the deal. The PPP body had prequalified 12 developers to participate in the tender.

https://www.power-technology.com/comment/solar-power-acwa-power/
 
New Renewable Energy Deals in Saudi Arabia
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Saudi Arabian plans for renewable energy

Saudi Arabia has realized that renewable energy, in particular, solar power is the way to achieve sustainability. As a result, it has signed numerous renewable energy deals over the year to build Saudi Arabian solar power plants. The focus of these deals is to invest in solar, wind, and concentrated solar. The Renewable Energy Project Development Office (REPDO) was established as part of the Ministry of Energy in 2017 to achieve the objectives of the National Renewable Energy Program (NERP) to accomplish vision 2030.

Second Round of NERP
Under the second round of NERP, KSA plans to work on at least 12 different Saudi Arabian solar power projects worth a capacity of 3.1 GW in 2019. Seven projects providing solar power in Saudi Arabia capable of 1.51GW of electricity have already been announced, the details of which are as follows

  1. Medina solar PV independent power project (IPP): Medina Province (50MW)
  2. Rafha solar PV IPP: Northern Borders province (45MW)
  3. Qurayyat solar PV IPP: Al-Jawf Province (200MW)
  4. Al-Faisaliah solar PV IPP: Mecca Province (600MW)
  5. Rabigh solar PV IPP: Mecca Province (300MW)
  6. Jeddah solar PV IPP: Mecca Province (300MW)
  7. Mahd al-Dahab solar PV IPP: Medina Province (20MW)
The power generated by these solar power systems is expected to be sufficient to supply 226,500 households in Saudi Arabia with solar power.

Additionally, it would create over 4,500 employment opportunities throughout the execution of the project. The advisors for this round include Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) from Japan as the lead and financial advisor. DLA Piper from the UK acted as the legal advisor, whereas the technical advisor was the German Fichtner.

The projects would be split among two groups based on financing. Financing for Group A will be via corporate funding after analyzing the balance sheet of the consortium members or through limited or non-recourse debt. For Group B, limited or non-recourse debt facilities would provide financing. The REPDO would oversee 30% of the total development, whereas the sovereign wealth fund (the public investment fund) would manage the rest.

Wind Power Generation
Saudi Arabia realizing the advantages of wind energy, has also announced the establishment of the country’s first wind farm. In addition to ensuring solar power in Saudi Arabia, other forms of alternative energy like the wind is essential. The 400-megawatt Dumat Al Jandal facility is expected to start operations in 2022 and would be the biggest wind power plant in the Middle East.

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Ethraa and its Mission
The third round is expected to tender at least another six projects in the last quarter of the year. Ethraa stands behind Saudi Arabian vision of 2030 and plays its part in shifting to renewable energy. Join Ethraa in its mission of achieving a solar-powered KSA. Contact us for more information.

https://www.ethraa-a.com/new-renewable-energy-deals-in-saudi-arabia/

Saudi Arabia’s 300 MW Sakaka solar plant comes online
The PV facility was completed a month and a half ahead of schedule by Saudi energy company ACWA Power. The project will sell power at $0.0236/kWh.

NOVEMBER 27, 2019 EMILIANO BELLINI
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The 300 MW Sakaka PV project.

Image: ACWA Power

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Saudi energy group ACWA has announced the completion of the 300 MW Sakaka solar project.

The plant, Saudi Arabia’s second operational solar park, was grid connected a month and a half ahead of schedule and has begun a commercial operation pilot phase, ACWA announced in a press release.

“The solar project has established a 100% local employment rate within the first year of operation, with 90% of the workforce comprised by the youth of [the] Al Jouf region,” said the Saudi power company. “Additionally, Sakaka PV IPP [independent power producer] registered over 30% of contractual local content during the construction and development phases.”

The project was tendered by the kingdom’s Renewable Energy Project Development Office (REPDO) in February 2017 alongside 400 MW of wind power capacity. Some 11 months later, REPDO announced it had shortlisted bids by ACWA, a consortium formed by Japan’s Marubeni Corp, Khaled Ahmed Juffali Energy & Utilities Limited and Axia Power Holdings BV for the tender’s final phase. That came after ACWA submitted the second lowest bid, offering a final solar electricity price of SAR0.08872/kWh ($0.0236) with the lowest – the SAR0.06697/kWh submitted by a consortium formed by UAE solar developer Masdar and French utility EDF – rejected before the final phase of the procurement. The Marubeni consortium offered SAR0.09976. REPDO had selected 27 companies in early April to proceed to the request for proposals stage of the tender.

ACWA secured SAR1.2 billion ($320 million) for the project a year ago.

The Sakaka project was the first large scale PV facility tendered by Saudi Arabia. In January, REPDO launched a tender for the development and construction of seven new solar projects with a combined generation capacity of 1,515 MW. That procurement exercise has so far attracted interest from more than 250 companies. The tender is part of the second phase of the kingdom’s National Renewable Energy Program.

https://www.pv-magazine.com/2019/11/27/saudi-arabias-300-mw-sakaka-solar-plant-comes-online/

Great.
 
Saudi Arabia launches 1.2 GW solar tender


With the third procurement round of the kingdom’s National Renewable Energy Program, the Renewable Energy Project Development Office is tendering four large-scale solar projects. Successful bidders will have to include at least 17% local content in their facilities.

JANUARY 9, 2020 EMILIANO BELLINI

The kingdom has kicked off a 1.2 GW tender which includes the contract for a 700 MW project.

Saudi Arabia’s Renewable Energy Project Development Office (REPDO) has opened the request-for-qualification process related to a tender for 1.2 GW of solar generation capacity.

REPDO will use the third round of the kingdom’s National Renewable Energy Program to select developers to construct four solar power projects, with generation capacities of 80, 120, 300 and a mammoth 700 MW.

The Saudi government stated the selected projects must contain at least 17% local content. The deadline to pre-qualify for the tender is February 6.

In March, REPDO said the second round of the program – intended to allocate 1.5 GW of large scale solar capacity – attracted 250 bidders. In July, the administrative body said the number of bidders had been narrowed down to 60, 28 of which are based in Saudi Arabia. The final results of the exercise are yet to be announced.

In the first round of the procurement program, REPDO assigned 300 MW of solar generation capacity to a single facility, the Sakaka solar project which is now operational. That first tender attracted global attention by attracting the lowest solar electricity price ever bid, with French energy giant EDF offering to generate solar power for a levelized cost of SAR0.06697/kWh ($0.018). That bid was rejected, however, with Saudi energy giant ACWA taking the prize with an offer of SAR0.08872/kWh.

https://www.pv-magazine.com/2020/01/09/saudi-arabia-launches-1-2-gw-pv-tender/

Saudi Arabia reveals giant solar budget

By Energy Reporters | 28.01.2020 | Policy

Saudi Arabia says it plans to invest up to US$50 billion in renewable energy by 2023 to reduce its dependence on oil.

The Middle East Solar Industry Association (Mesia) reported that the Saudi authorities’ implementation of renewed legal and regulatory frameworks within the National Renewable Energy Programme (NREP) had boosted output.

“Saudi Arabia is now in the third year of implementation of its massive target of 60 gigawatts (GW) of renewable energy generation by 2030,” the report said.

The kingdom has a colossal carbon footprint.

Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil giant Aramco is the greatest contributor to global carbon emissions of any firm on the planet since 1965.

BP reported that Saudi Arabia produced 12 million barrels of oil per day last year or 12.9 per cent of the world’s production. In Saudi Arabia, all of the oil production is controlled by Saudi Aramco, the state-owned oil company and reportedly the most profitable firm in the world.

The NREP targets were increased in 2018 to a five-year target of 27.3 GW and a 12-year goal of 58.7 GW.

Martine Mamlouk, the Mesia secretary general, said investment in solar energy was evident across West Asia and North Africa. “Saudi Arabia has a target of almost 60 GW of renewable energy, out of which 40 GW are solar,” she told the media.

“This is in line with the kingdom’s objective of diversification and Vision 2030. While the industry is reaching grid parity, it is great to see the deployment of new innovative technologies to increase the efficiency of systems, production management and grids.”

The Saudi royals hope to reduce the kingdom’s dependence on oil and gas, which account for about 50 per cent of gross domestic product and 70 per cent of export earnings.

Saudi Arabia has 297.7 billion barrels of proven reserves and great influence over its Opec partners and Russia, which together account for 77.9 per cent of world oil reserves and 53.6 per cent of production. The US accounts for 3.6 per cent of reserves and 16.6 per cent of production.

Research firm Frost and Sullivan said the Saudi energy demand had been rising with consumption increasing by 60 per cent in the last decade. Electricity demand reached 62.7 GW last year and is forecast to reach 120 GW by 2030.

To meet demand, the 300-megawatt Sakaka photovoltaic development – the largest in Saudi Arabia – opened in November.

Six projects for a solar capacity of 1.47 GW are open to beds: Medina (50MW), Rafha (20MW), Al Faisaliah (600 MW), Jeddah (300 MW), Rabigh (300 MW) and Al Jawf (200 MW).

There are also other wind and solar projects that are due to be up for tender early this year.

https://www.energy-reporters.com/policy/saudi-arabia-reveals-giant-solar-budget/
 
Saudi wind farm wins international award

https://www.arabnews.com/node/1624946/saudi-arabia

Uzbekistan signs 2 bln USD energy agreements with Saudi Arabia's ACWA Power
Source: Xinhua| 2020-03-06 03:16:49|Editor: yhy

TASHKENT, March 5 (Xinhua) -- Uzbekistan has signed strategic agreements with Saudi Arabia's ACWA Power company to build thermal and wind power plants worth of 2 billion U.S. dollars, the country's ministry of energy said Thursday.

One of the agreements envisages a 25-year power purchase agreement with a total investment value of 1.2 billion dollars for a 1.5 GW gas-turbine power plant to be built in Sirdaria region, the ministry said.

National Electric Networks of Uzbekistan will act as the sole buyer of electricity under the power purchase agreement, according to the statement.

According to another agreement, ACWA Power will invest up to 1.1 bln U.S. dollars to build a wind farm with the capacity of 1 GW, the ministry said.

"Since infrastructure development is the key to our economic progress, we need the best international experience to support our ambitious energy goals. We selected ACWA Power as a strategic partner in expanding the power generation capacities in Uzbekistan due to their exceptional experience ..." the statement quoted Minister of Energy Alisher Sultanov as saying.

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-03/06/c_138847440.htm

ACWA is doing great lately. Winning many orders across the world.

Saudi's Acwa Power signs deal to develop sustainable water desalination sector in Egypt

https://www.arabianindustry.com/uti...e-water-desalination-sector-in-egypt-6343077/
 
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Saudi Arabia’s new renewables giant
24 January 2020


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Saudi Arabia has ambitious energy diversification targets, yet execution has been slow and the kingdom remains synonymous with petroleum. However, ACWA Power, a company backed by the public investment fund and Saudi investors, is helping the country become a leader in the renewable energy sector.

Gulf Monitor | Jessica Obeid | Renewable energy

Seeking security
Saudi Arabia is known for its large petroleum reserves, constituting 18% of the global proven reserves, according to OPEC, and ranks as the largest exporter of oil. While petroleum has traditionally dominated the kingdom’s energy markets, including power generation, energy security is a major concern for the sustainability of the sector.

Energy security is a matter of national security, driving policies, regulations, investments and foreign relations across the world. While the term is vague, it generally refers to the security of uninterrupted energy supply – and contrary to common belief, the risk of disruption in supply in petroleum-producing economies is quite significant.

Electricity consumption in the kingdom has been increasing at a significant rate, largely driven by population growth and industrial development. Climate change has also played a role, with temperature increases resulting in a higher demand for cooling in addition to water scarcity and subsidies. Electricity and fuel subsidies have resulted in cheap electricity tariffs, increasing wasteful consumption and pressure on the state budget. Growth in peak demand averaged 7.3% between 2005 and 2015, compared to an average of 5.5% in non-OECD countries. Reduction in subsidies and efficiency efforts in the past three years have decreased the demand growth rate, but it remains significant. Meanwhile, annual installed capacity growth has similarly averaged 7.7%.

The growing domestic electricity demand and the technologies in use have led to a retraction in the share of oil and an increase in the share of natural gas in power generation. Domestic production of the latter is insufficient to meet the rising need, requiring substantial investments in infrastructure and gas, and eliminating any future export potential while rendering the power sector more vulnerable. In light of this, diversification and investment in alternative energy sources, including renewables, are not only important to decarbonising the power sector and mitigating climate change – they will also be crucial to decreasing the sector’s vulnerabilities and enhancing energy security.



Slow start
Saudi Arabia has set ambitious renewable energy targets, yet implementation remains unmatched with aspiration, and the policies lag behind. The current power generation capacity stands at around 80 GW, and the peak demand in 2030 is forecasted at 130 GW. The kingdom has great potential for success with wind, photovoltaic (PV) systems and concentrated solar power (CSP) systems, and early last year announced a new target of 27.3 GW of renewable energy by 2023 and 58.7 GW of renewable capacity by 2030. The 2030 target includes 40 GW from solar PV, 16 GW from wind, and 2.7 GW from CSP. But only a few projects have been awarded or completed to date: the 300-MW Sakaka solar PV plant (currently online in its pilot phase), the 400-MW Dumat Al Jandal wind farm (under construction), and the 50-MW Waad El Shamal CSP plant (completed).



A giant in the making
Energy diversification differs across countries and regions. The changing energy scene, technological advancements and climate commitments are creating a new set of national challenges across the globe. Petroleum-producing economies, oil companies and sovereign wealth funds are diversifying their investment portfolios to reduce the risk of carbon taxes, stranded assets and long-lasting lower oil prices. Many are also attempting to rebrand themselves and transition to more diverse economies and more resilient business models.

But while Saudi Arabia’s brand remains tied to petroleum, Riyadh-headquartered ACWA Power, a private company operating in power and water desalination, is increasing its market share in the renewables segment. The company’s strategy seems to be entering new markets from early renewable deployment stages through medium- to large-scale utility projects in accordance with national energy plans. With shareholders including Saudi Public Investment Fund and the International Finance Corporation, ACWA Power is showcasing Saudi leadership in the global energy sector, with a renewable energy portfolio across nine countries: Bulgaria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Jordan, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, the UAE and Vietnam. Earlier this month, the company signed a new agreement to develop a 240-MW wind power project in Azerbaijan.


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The company has a renewable energy portfolio of around 20 projects and total installed capacity of 3,186 MW, amounting to $10.57bn and divided between solar PV, CSP and wind. Its largest generation capacity is in solar PV with 1,706 MW and financing of $2.28bn. Its highest financing portfolio is in CSP, with projects of 1,360 MW and totalling $8.1bn.


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**UAE- Noor I CSP and PV project finance is $4.3bn, resized in the chart to optimise visualisation


Regional influencer
Morocco is on the forefront of diversification efforts in renewable energy, and ACWA Power has been a dominant player in the solar industry. It has developed the CSP and solar PV projects in the country totalling 802 MW, while its share of the 1,200-MW wind projects is only 120 MW. More players are gaining momentum in the sector as upcoming solar projects, totalling 420 MW, have recently been awarded to a consortium led by France’s EDF and UAE’s Masdar.

The players are more diverse in Egypt and Jordan. In Egypt, ACWA has developed 120 MW of the 1,800-MW Benban PV project and 200 MW of the Kom Ombo solar PV project. In Jordan, where renewable energy projects installed, planned or under development since 2011 total 1,560 MW, ACWA Power is a latecomer. There, the company has only developed two projects of 50 MW each: Mafraq and Risha in 2018 and 2019, respectively.

In the Gulf, the company is developing the 260-MW Shuaa PV and Noor Energy I in Dubai, which is the 4thphase of the 5-GW Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum. The project is a $4.3bn 950-MW plant of combined CSP and solar PV and is the world’s largest single-site CSP and single hybrid solar power plant. ACWA Power has also developed the 300-MW Sakaka PV project; the first utility-scale renewable energy plant in Saudi Arabia.

The company’s presence in South Africa remains low, with only 150 MW CSP of a total of approximately 1,500 MW of installed solar capacity. But in Ethiopia, the company is a significant player in a growing market, as it is developing two projects of 125 MW each – a large portion of the 350 MW in total existing solar energy projects – and the first two projects in the country implemented through the World Bank’s Scaling Solar project. The country’s plan is to implement between 1,000 MW and 1,350 MW in solar projects by 2024.

ACWA’s success is not only a sign of Saudi Arabia’s commitment to branching out of petroleum – it also shows the kingdom’s ability to command a significant presence in renewables. With its record low prices and a rapidly extending reach, the company’s renewable energy arm is making a name for itself as a key player in the Gulf region and beyond.



Jessica Obeid is an independent energy consultant and academy associate at Chatham House, where she previously served as a resident fellow in the Energy, Environment and Resources Department. She previously worked as chief energy engineer at the UN Development Programme in Beirut. Jessica holds a master’s degree in Political Sciences and a bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering. She is a senior advisor at Castlereagh Associates.


https://castlereagh.net/saudi-arabias-new-renewables-giant/
 
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