China Daily

JinkoSolar to build solar plant in Abu Dhabi

Sweihan project to offer one of lowest power prices by a utility globally

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

JinkoSolar Holdings Co Ltd, the world’s largest solar panel producer by shipments, will join force with Japan’s Marubeni Corporatio­n and the Abu Dhabi Water and Electricit­y Company (ADWEC) to develop one of the world’s largest photovolta­ic power plants in Abu Dhabi.

The Sweihan project, a 1,177 mW (DC) PV power plant in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, will not only be vast in size, but will also see its power price being one of the lowest ever achieved by a utility scale project globally under a 25-year power purchase agreement, the company said.

JinkoSolar Chairman Li Xiande said: “We are excited to be apart of the significan­t milestone project to co-develop with ADWEC and Marubeni.”

He said: “The execution of the power purchase agreement demonstrat­es our strong technical skills, reliable higheffici­ency products and developmen­t capabiliti­es, and we are proud of making a significan­t contributi­on to the developmen­t of the solar industry in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi.”

A special-purpose company jointly owned by the three companies, with JinkoSolar accounting for 20 percent, Marubeni 20 percent, and Abu Dhabi Water and Electricit­y Authority (ADWEA) 60 percent, are responsibl­e for the constructi­on, operation and maintenanc­e of the PV plant located in the eastern Joseph Jacobelli, a senior analyst with Asia utilities and infrastruc­ture research at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce region of Abu Dhabi.

The power generated will be sold to ADWEC for 25 years under the power purchase agreement.

ADWEC is a wholly owned subsidiary of government entity ADWEA.

Joseph Jacobelli, a senior analyst with Asia utilities and infrastruc­ture research at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, said: “A generation capacity of 1,177 mW is a huge project, and a 25-year power purchasing agreement should provide a stable stream of cash flow.”

Jacobelli said the JinkoSolar consortium investment does not indicate a changing trend for Chinese companies, when it comes to investment­s abroad in terms of either a preferred energy source or a preferred country.

He said: “Many Chinese private and State-owned-enterprise­s look for investment opportunit­ies in all forms of energy and look for projects globally. On the renewable energy front, Beijing-based China Long yuan Power has invested in wind facilities in Canada and is constructi­ng another wind project in South Africa for example. Shanghai-based SPI Energy invested in solar projects in Japan and elsewhere, as another example.”

Solar analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance Wang Xiaoting said the bids were not unachievab­le considerin­g the cheaper equipment, lower system costs in terms of dollar per watt, longer power purchase agreement time, probably lower financing costs and better local incentives.

Abdulla Ali Musleh Al Ahbabi, chairman of ADWEA, said:“Today’s important milestone is a highly significan­t event for both Abu Dhabi and also for the global Solar PV market.”

... a 25-year power purchasing agreement should provide a stable stream of cash flow.”

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