The National - News

Saudi firms turn to solar power as a hedge

▶ Acwa Power chief warns electricit­y subsidies could end as the kingdom plans to generate more renewables

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Saudi companies are looking to solar electricit­y to hedge the risk of rising power prices if energy subsidies are cut, according to one of the kingdom’s biggest plant developers.

“Everybody is very convinced that electricit­y prices are going to be reformed over the next three years,” the Acwa Power Internatio­nal chief executive Paddy Padmanatha­n told Bloomberg in Paris.

“That means only one thing: that tariffs are going to go up.”

Saudi Arabia is in the midst of implementi­ng its Vision 2030 master plan to wean its economy off oil and diversify into other industries.

Crown prince Mohammed bin Salman has enacted policies to shake up the country, from a proposed initial public offering of Aramco to allowing women to drive. Part of his changes may eventually include rolling back energy subsidies that keep a cap on fuel and power prices.

The country plans to increase electricit­y generation from renewable energy sources to 9.5 gigawatts (GW) by 2030.

Saudi set a record on October 3 in its first solar tender, drawing bids of just 1.79 cents a kilowatt-hour, a quarter lower than previous prices for the cheapest solar energy in the world. That bid was submitted by Abu Dhabi’s renewable energy company Masdar and France’s EDF, coming in 24 per cent cheaper than the second lowest bid from Acwa Power.

Last month, Acwa Power and China’s Shanghai Power were selected by the Dubai Electricit­y and Water Authority to build a 700 megawatts (MW) extension to the Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Complex, the largest concentrat­ed solar plant in the world.

Acwa will be participat­ing in a tender next week to provide a food processing firm with a “significan­t amount” of solar power that will come in below 100MW, according to Mr Padmanatha­n.

Clean power purchase agreements between corporatio­ns and project developers are already big business in markets such as the United States and the Nordics. Companies such as Facebook, Apple and Amazon.com are inking contracts that fix a price on their power. Now, Saudi companies are becoming interested in that approach.

“Everybody is starting to think, ‘why don’t I get renewable energy procured and directly into my system now as quickly as I can,’’ Mr Padmanatha­n said. “This tender is a first off, but there are several others that are preparing tenders like this.”

He is expecting the market for private renewable energy contracts in Saudi Arabia to ramp up to several hundred megawatts a year, taking as much as 2GW of demand off the country’s central power generation in as little as four years.

It is “what the future of the electricit­y consumptio­n will look like in terms of energy consumptio­n”, he said.

“Inevitably what you will find will be a very significan­t amount of renewable energy.”

In addition to its push into renewables, Saudi Arabia is also looking to improve energy efficiency to cut down on consumptio­n.

Last week the Public Investment Fund (PIF), the country’s sovereign wealth fund, announced the launch of a new energy service company, Super Esco, designed to increase energy efficiency across government and public buildings.

All government entities will be obliged to contract with the energy service company, establishe­d with a capitalisa­tion of 1.9 billion Saudi riyals (Dh1.86bn), which will fund and manage the retrofit of government and public buildings, in a bid to reduce government spending on the electricit­y sector.

Inevitably what you will find will be a very significan­t amount of renewable energy PADDY PADMANATHA­N Chief executive of Acwa Power

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