Khaleej Times

RENEWABLE IS THE FUTURE

- Waheed Abbas

dubai — The UAE and other GCC countries can achieve significan­t benefits from renewable energy by creating thousands of jobs, saving millions of barrels of oil and billions of dollars in discounted fuel savings over the next decade, says a new study.

By 2030, the GCC countries can create 220,500 jobs, save 354 million barrels of

The UAE’s commitment to diversifyi­ng the energy mix is central to our longterm economic growth

Suhail bin Mohammed Faraj Faris Al Mazrouei, UAE Minister of Energy and Industry

oil equivalent in regional power sectors, $46-$76 billion in discounted fuel savings, cutting water withdrawal­s in power sector by 11.5 trillion litres and 136 million tonnes of carbon dioxide if the region successful­ly meets its sustainabl­e energy targets, according to the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency’s (Irena) ‘Renewable energy: Market analysis GCC 2019’.

Under current plans, the Gulf region will install 7 gigawatts (GW) of new power generation capacity from renewable sources by the early 2020s, Irena said, adding that each GCC country has different targets in terms of electricit­y generation through clean energy.

Over the next decade, we will create, in the kingdom, a global hub of renewable energy capability upward of 200GW

Khalid Al Falih, Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Energy

The GCC is among the most attractive regions in the world to develop large-scale solar and wind energy projects

Adnan Amin, director-general, Irena

As per latest data, the region had some 146GW of installed power capacity, of which renewable energy accounted for less than 1 per cent — 867 megawatts. The UAE accounted for 68 per cent of the total installed capacity in 2018, followed by Saudi Arabia (16 per cent) and Kuwait (9 per cent). The UAE hosts close to 79 per cent of the installed solar PV (photovolta­ic) capacity in the GCC and has managed to attract some low-cost solar PV projects without offering subsidies.

According to Irena’s projection­s, solar technologi­es could account for 90 per cent of renewable energy jobs in the region by 2030. Sharing the breakdown, Irena sees 50,000 jobs to come from concentrat­ed solar power, 124,000 from photovolta­ic (utilities), 23,000 from photovolta­ic (rooftop), 11,000 from wind renewable energy and 12,000 from waste-to-energy.

“The GCC is among the most attractive regions in the world to develop large-scale solar and wind energy projects as a result of resource abundance and a favourable policy environmen­t, a fact that is backed up by record low prices,” said Adnan Amin, director-general, Irena.

“As a fossil-fuel exporting region, the GCC’s decisive move towards a renewable energy future is a signal to global investors and to the energy community that we are experienci­ng a step-change in global energy dynamics and a true energy transforma­tion,” he said.

“The UAE’s commitment to diversifyi­ng the energy mix is central to our long-term economic growth and sustainabl­e developmen­t objectives… As we look to add generation capacity to serve growing population­s and expanding economies, renewables will increasing­ly serve as a central pillar of low-carbon developmen­t,” said Suhail bin Mohammed Faraj Faris Al Mazrouei, Minister of Energy and Industry.

UAE leads GCC

By the end of 2018, the UAE led the GCC for installed renewable energy capacity with two per cent share of renewable energy in total electricit­y capacity, followed by Kuwait and Oman at 0.4 per cent and 0.2 per cent.

“We have placed our natural resources at the centre of our wider plans to diversify our national sources of income, and today, we are better prepared than ever to celebrate exporting our last shipment of oil by 2050,” Awaidha Murshed Al Marar, chairman, Department of Energy in Abu Dhabi, said.

He said through the launch of the UAE Energy Strategy 2050, the aim is to increase individual and corporate consumptio­n efficiency by 40 per cent, boosting clean energy’s share of the UAE’s energy mix to 50 per cent, which would save nearly Dh700 billion by 2050.

“The Strategy relies on a mix of renewable, nuclear and clean fossil energy to strike a balance between economic needs and environmen­tal objectives.”

Khalid Al Falih, Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Energy, Industry and Petroleum Resources, said the kingdom is rich in multiple sources of energy — from oil and gas to solar and wind, as well as abundant uranium resources. “When it comes to our own energy mix, we are optimising it dramatical­ly by switching to cleaner fuels, improving the efficiency of our power sector, and introducin­g renewable and nuclear energy,” Al Falih said while addressing Abu Dhabi Sustainabi­lity Week on Tuesday.

“Over the next decade, we will create, in the Kingdom, a global hub of renewable energy capability upward of 200GW. In fact, in the next 10 years, we will develop domestical­ly close to 60GW of renewable energy capacity, of which 40GW will be photovolta­ic solar power, 3GW will be concentrat­ed solar power, and 16 GW of wind,” the Saudi minister said.

Speaking about the deployment of renewable energy projects in Saudi Arabia, Al Falih said in 2019, 12 projects will be tendered to stimulate investor, manufactur­ing and developer activity across the entire value chain. “This will be coupled with the citizens’ uptake of rooftop solar in addition to various other giga-scale projects on the horizon,” he added.

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