The National - News

MENA FUELS COAL PLANS DESPITE LACK OF RESERVES

▶ Region places bigger focus on importing coal over natural gas

- LEANNE GRAVES

Efforts to diversify the power mix are gaining momentum with the Middle East and North Africa region aiming to add more coal-fired power plants, despite its lack of reserves, the Arab Petroleum Investment­s Corporatio­n (Apicorp) said.

A region-wide effort is being heralded by government­s to create a basket of energy sources to help meet the rise in demand for electricit­y. “There are several reasons government­s are looking at coal, but the most important is to diversify the energy mix and enhance energy security,” Apicorp said in a new report.

However, for a region looking to shield itself from external liabilitie­s, the absence of coal reserves will require countries to source from the open market. “While importing coal reserves still opens the region up to volatility, it reduces the reliance on natural gas. It’s better than relying on one source,” said Ghassan Alakwaa, an energy analyst at Apicorp.

Historical­ly, coal has not been an option in Mena, except for Morocco. These countries have been relying on oil and gas-fired power plants to meet most of their electricit­y needs. The hydrocarbo­n-rich GCC has always looked to cheap-to-extract resources while less-endowed nations rely on fuel imports.

Mr Alakwaa said that while everyone was diversifyi­ng to improve energy security, momentum was more with renewables.

But renewables cannot fill the entire gap, not so far at least as solar and wind energy are unable to provide a 24-hour continuous supply of power at a cost-competitiv­e rate to convention­al power. The baseload, or a power source that can maintain continuous operations, is still required to complement these projects to avoid disruption.

Natural gas is one way, but for a country such as the UAE, slashing import bills and reliance on unstable regional relationsh­ips outweighs the gas option.

So the country began ushering in the US$1.8 billion Hassyan coal power plant, slated to be online by 2023.

Coal remains the dominant fuel, providing about 40 per cent of the world’s electricit­y, but upfront capital costs are high compared to the competitio­n.

Apicorp said that the costs range from $1.2bn to $3bn per gigawatt of installed capacity, significan­tly less than nuclear and comparable to gas-fired plants. However, the cost to run a coal plant is lower. Apicorp said investment decisions were heavily dependent on the availabili­ty of finance, government support and coal supplies.

Currently there are three operationa­l coal plants in the region, all in Morocco, but another seven are planned – including the UAE’s Hassyan.

Paddy Padmanatha­n, the chief executive of Acwa Power, the company behind the Hassyan project, said countries are looking to balance the fuel mix while generating electricit­y at the lowest possible cost.

He said that the levelised cost of generated electricit­y, which includes purchasing coal from a provider such as Australia, is less than 5 US cents per kilowatt hour (kWh).

“The closest price that can compete in renewable energy with storage is concentrat­ed solar power, which is just under 10 cents,” he said. “So to fulfil the objective of a competitiv­e generation solution with a diverse fuel mix, having a bit of coal is understand­able.”

Coal may live on in the region, but it will be a restrained growth worldwide as countries focus more on renewables to meet climate change goals. “Coal’s share is expected to increase in the next five to 10 years, but its share in the power mix will remain very limited,” Mr Alakwaa said.

 ?? Reuters ?? The Mena region is looking into coal-fired power plants to offset its reliance on gas imports. Upfront costs for coal are high
Reuters The Mena region is looking into coal-fired power plants to offset its reliance on gas imports. Upfront costs for coal are high

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