UAE is leading in renewable energy adoption — Dagher
Nation is looking at the full equation and balancing the supply sources
UAE is ‘leading’ in the movement towards reducing carbon emissions and adopting a more sustainable approach to energy production, said Bernard Dagher, President & CEO, Grid Solutions, GE Renewable Energy (Middle East, Turkey & Africa).
UAE was “one of the 40 nations included in US President Joe Biden’s leader summit around climate change,” said Danaher. The country “not only has committed to cutting emissions by a quarter by 2030, but it has already put an energy strategy for 2050”.
Dagher was speaking at the WSBF yesterday.
“UAE is looking at the full equation, balancing the supply sources, and efficiency,” said Dagher.
Mix of energy
UAE aims to become a major hydrogen producer, and to reduce carbon emissions by 24 per cent by 2030. Plans include investment in green hydrogen, which is produced using renewable energy, like solar power as well as using carbon-capture technologies to create what is known as blue hydrogen.
Dagher believes countries should avoid emitting excess carbon and if they cannot avoid, they should reduce and capture.
“We can capture that CO2 that we cannot avoid or reduce, that’s a very important part, but more important are the hybrid industries, because today we’re going to all live with a certain mix of energy,” said Dagher.
Renewable energy is now at ‘grid parity’, said Dagher. This happens when an alternative energy source can generate power at a levelised cost of electricity (LCOE) that is less than or equal to the price of power from the electricity grid.
He said it has become economically sustainable to produce renewable energy without government support.
“It’s good to have renewable sources and it’s good to drive electrification of industries, but if you don’t connect the load and the supply to each other, then you’re not getting anything.”