Home Industry Energy UAE’s Masdar Eyes Saudi Investments The green energy firm is proactively seeking partnerships in the Kingdom, according to its chief executive. by Reuters September 11, 2012 Abu Dhabi government-owned green energy firm Masdar is looking into investing in Saudi Arabia, chief executive Sultan Al Jaber said on Tuesday. “We are proactively seeking partnerships in Saudi,” Jaber told reporters, declining to give any details about the kind of project, or the investment capital under consideration. “I can’t tell how much now because it depends on the market and the regulatory framework but we are seriously and closely looking at the Saudi market,” he said. Investing in renewable energy projects is an increasingly popular topic among the top oil exporters of the Middle East but actual green energy installations are few and far between. Masdar has made significant renewable energy investments in countries where political and public support for clean energy brings with it big incentives, especially in Europe. But back in the United Arab Emirates, it has only around 10 megawatts (MW) of solar capacity up and running, with a 100 MW concentrated solar plant – the world’s biggest – under construction and another 150 MW planned nearby. Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, announced plans in May to possibly build up to 41,000 MW of solar power plants within two decades at an estimated cost of over $100 billion. 0 Comments