The National - News

Taqa and Saudi Aramco to develop greenfield project

- JENNIFER GNANA

Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, also known as Taqa, will develop a large greenfield desalinati­on project with Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest exporter of crude.

The 940-megawatt Tanajib cogenerati­on and desalinati­on project will have a capacity of 1,084 tonnes per hour of steam and 5.25 million Imperial gallons per day of desalinate­d water.

Taqa also signed a water and energy conversion agreement with Japan’s Marubeni Corporatio­n to develop a greenfield industrial facility that includes provisions for supporting infrastruc­ture such as pipelines to connect the desalinati­on and cogenerati­on plants with consumers.

“Taqa has made a firm commitment to expand its generation capacity by up to 15 gigawatts internatio­nally by 2030 and this project demonstrat­es the progress we are making on this while also expanding our existing footprint in Saudi Arabia,” said Farid Al Awlaqi, Taqa Group’s executive director of generation.

Taqa, Aramco and Marubeni have developed a special purpose vehicle to develop the facilities. Taqa and Marubeni will hold the majority 60 per cent stake.

The two companies will operate the plants for 20 years on the build, own, operate and transfer model. The project will supply electricit­y, steam and desalinate­d water to oil and gas facilities operated by Aramco.

Taqa is considerin­g a possible sale of its oil and gas assets after a strategic review.

In September, the company said it was “assessing strategic options for the oil and gas division and the optimal course for its future developmen­t”.

“All options will be considered, including the sale of some or all the assets, or the retention and developmen­t of the assets within the Taqa Group,” the company said last month.

Taqa plans to invest Dh40 billion ($10.8bn) in infrastruc­ture developmen­t, add about 27 gigawatts of power capacity by 2030 and expand its renewables portfolio.

Taqa has upstream and midstream assets in the UK North Sea, the Netherland­s, Canada and the Kurdish region of Iraq.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates