Khaleej Times

UAE invests Dh8B in clean energy

- Waheed Abbas

dubai — The UAE was the secondlarg­est investor in the renewable energy sector in the Middle East and Africa last year, investing Dh8 billion ($2.2 billion), a stunning growth of 2,815 per cent over the previous year.

The UAE recorded the second highest growth after Rwanda’s 8,665 per cent as the African country invested $400 million (Dh1.46 billion) in the renewable energy sector in 2017.

Regionally, Egypt took the lead with Dh9.5 billion ($2.6 billion) investment­s last year, achieving a growth of nearly 500 per cent over the previous year.

Jordan invested Dh4 billion ($1.1 billion), an increase of 26 per cent. While Morocco and South Africa reduced investment­s into the renewables by 48 per cent and 88 per cent to Dh734 million ($200 million) and Dh367 million ($100 million), respective­ly.

“The UAE’s investment last year was more heavily concentrat­ed. Two PV [photovolta­ic] projects, the largest to go ahead anywhere in the world last year, reached financial close: the Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum III installati­on, at 1.2GW and $899 million, and the Marubeni JinkoSolar and Adwea Sweihan plant, at 800MW and an estimated $968 million,” said a Bloomberg New Energy Finance and UN Environmen­t Programme report.

“Both projects have been financed by equity and debt from internatio­nal developmen­t and commercial banks, and were won by internatio­nal developers with keenly priced bids in 2016.”

The MEA region, according to the report, saw asset finance increase by 48 per cent to Dh27.15 ($7.4 billion) last year.

“Some particular bright spots were the UAE, where finance jumped from almost nothing in 2016 to $2.1 billion in 2017, and Egypt, where it leapt from $400 million to $2.6 billion. Just four projects were asset-financed in the UAE last year but two of these were very large solar PV arrays, of 1.2GW and 800MW respective­ly, for the Marubeni JinkoSolar and Adwea Sweihan PV Plant and the Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum III PV Plant,” it noted.

Globally, investment­s in renewable energy edged up two per cent in 2017 to $279.8 billion, taking cumulative investment since 2010 to $2.2 trillion, and since 2004 to $2.9 trillion. The latest rise in capital outlays took place in a context of further falls in the costs of wind and solar that made it possible to buy megawatts of equipment more cheaply than ever before, it said.

A record 157GW of renewable power were commission­ed in 2017, up from 143GW in 2016 and far out-stripping the 70GW of net fossil fuel generating capacity added last year. Solar alone accounted for 98GW, or 38 per cent of the net new power capacity coming on stream during 2017, it added.

— waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com

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 ?? Supplied photo ?? Solar accounted for 38 per cent of the net new capacity coming on stream in 2017. —
Supplied photo Solar accounted for 38 per cent of the net new capacity coming on stream in 2017. —

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