Saudi to soon launch $30-50bn renewable energy programme
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Saudi to soon launch $30-50bn renewable energy programme

Saudi to soon launch $30-50bn renewable energy programme

Riyadh will start the first round of bidding for projects in the next few weeks

Gulf Business

Saudi Arabia will launch a renewable energy programme in coming weeks that is expected to involve investment of between $30bn and $50bn by 2023, Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said on Monday.

Falih, speaking at an energy industry event in Abu Dhabi, said Riyadh would start the first round of bidding within weeks for projects under the programme, which would produce 10 gigawatts of power.

Saudi Arabia has been for years trying to diversify its energy mix so that it can export more of its oil, rather than burning it at power and water desalination plants, but progress has been slow.

Power demand in the desert kingdom is growing 8 percent annually, forcing state-run Saudi Electricity Co, the Gulf’s largest utility company, to spend billions of dollars on projects to add capacity.

The kingdom produces very little renewable energy, representing less than 1 per cent of the total produced, but under an economic reform programme approved by King Salman last year, it targets renewable energy contributing 3,450 megawatts to the national energy mix by 2020, equating to 4 per cent of energy use in the kingdom.

Falih told the conference Saudi Arabia was working on ways to connect its renewable energy projects with Yemen, Jordan and Egypt. “We will connect to Africa to exchange non-fossil sources of energy,” he said, without elaborating.

Its finances strained by low oil prices, Riyadh wants to conduct many of its future infrastructure projects through partnerships in which private companies from within the kingdom and abroad would bear much of the cost and risk.

NUCLEAR ENERGY

In addition to the renewable programme, Riyadh is in the early stages of feasibility and design studies for its first two commercial nuclear reactors, which will total 2.8 gigawatts, Falih said.

“There will be significant investment in nuclear energy,” Falih said on Monday.

He did not give a value for those investments which represent the first concrete plans in terms of nuclear energy development in Saudi Arabia. No timeline was given neither.

In 2012, the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy (KACARE), a body set up by the government to spearhead development of renewable and nuclear energy, recommended that Saudi Arabia install 17 gigawatts of nuclear power but no plans were laid out to do so.

Riyadh has signed nuclear energy cooperation agreements with several countries able to build reactors but recent deals with France, Russia and South Korea go beyond these by including feasibility studies for atomic power plants and fuel cycle work.

Last year, Falih met with China’s leading state nuclear project developer China National Nuclear Corp (CNNC) to discuss cooperation in the nuclear power sector.


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