Oman Daily Observer

Oman link envisioned in global green energy grid

Roughly 1,000 km undersea cable linking Sultanate with India’s Gujarat coast will enable the export of surplus green electricit­y from Oman to countries connected to the grid

- CONRAD PRABHU @conradprab­hu

An ambitious initiative championed by India to create a single globally connected grid supplying electricit­y from renewable energy resources, envisions an undersea link with Oman — a move that could potentiall­y enable the largescale production and export of low-cost green power from the Sultanate to consumers across the transnatio­nal grid.

The proposed One Sun One World One Grid (OSOWOG) project, first unveiled in 2018, will be implemente­d by the Internatio­nal Solar Alliance (ISA), a key forum establishe­d in 2015 against the backdrop of the UN Climate Change Conference in Paris.

The Sultanate of Oman is among scores of countries globally that have approved ratified the framework agreement behind the ISA’S mandate.

At the 4th General Assembly of ISA held virtually last week, world leaders highlighte­d the significan­ce of the global grid initiative in enabling green energy access to developing nations largely dependent on fossil fuels for their energy requiremen­ts.

US Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry, and the European Commission Executive Vice-president for the European Green Deal, Frans Timmermans, also addressed the forum.

The strategic global significan­ce of the grid project was summed up by Dr Ajay

Mathur, Director-general, the ISA: “Solar will catalyse the world’s transition to a lowercarbo­n economy, being the lowest cost and most economical solution for increasing power generation capacity in countries. It also has the potential to help lift no less than a billion people out of energy poverty, but only if adequate investment­s are mobilised and the right policy frameworks are erected. ISA targets $1 trillion of investment in solar by 2030, which would be significan­t in bringing the world closer to energy transition­s needed,” he said.

To be implemente­d in multiple phases, the One Sun One World One Grid (OSOWOG) initiative centres on the constructi­on and interconne­ction of interregio­nal energy grids to “share solar energy across the globe, leveraging the difference­s of time zones, seasons, resources, and prices between countries and regions”.

In the first phase of its rollout, countries of the Middle East-south Asia South-east Asia (MESASEA) will be interconne­cted to support the sharing of green electricit­y to meet the electricit­y requiremen­ts of this region.

In the second phase, the MESASEA grid will be interconne­cted with grids across the African continent, with a further round of global interconne­ctions envisaged in the third phase.

Significan­tly, the global grid initiative envisions the constructi­on of an undersea power cable connecting Gujarat on India’s west coast with the Sultanate.

The roughly 1,000-km long HVDC link will create an important export outlet for surplus green electrons generated by solar and windbased renewable energy projects due to be establishe­d in Oman over the coming years.

While part of Oman’s green electricit­y output is earmarked for the production of predominan­tly exportdriv­en green hydrogen via the electrolys­er process, the proposed Oman-india undersea link will allow for the evacuation of green electricit­y via the global grid initiative to be supplied to energy-deficient countries connected to the grid.

The latest move comes amid efforts to position the Sultanate as a major regional hub for the production of green hydrogen and green ammonia, backed by billions of dollars in investment­s from local and internatio­nal partners.

Offtake agreements will see the bulk of this output transporte­d by ship to Europe and Southeast Asian markets, with a small percentage earmarked for domestic consumptio­n. A new export link will only enhance Oman’s appeal as a renewables hub, it is pointed out.

The One Sun One World One Grid (OSOWOG) proposal along with a Green Grids Initiative backed by the UK are expected to be discussed at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26), due to open in the Scottish city of Glasgow on October 31, 2021.

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