The Oklahoman

Solar plane’s arrival highlights clean-energy push by UAE

- BY ADAM SCHRECK Associated Press

ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES — The United Arab Emirates might not seem like an obvious spot to begin and end a globe-spanning flight promoting renewable energy.

It is OPEC’s fourth biggest oil producer, after all, where gas guzzlers rule the road and the air conditioni­ng is always on — not just at its indoor ski slope. Its oil output and fossil fuel-burning airlines are growing, and its per capita carbon emissions rank among the world’s highest.

Yet this federation of sheikhdoms on the Persian Gulf has emerged as an unlikely champion of clean energy. One way is by backing the Solar Impulse 2 solar plane, which ended its groundbrea­king round-the-world flight on Tuesday in Abu Dhabi and counts Emirati renewable-energy company Masdar among its sponsors. Here are some others:

GOING SOLAR

Dubai, the country’s cosmopolit­an commercial hub, last month picked an Emirati-Spanish consortium to develop the third phase of what is scheduled to become the world’s biggest solar park. The winning bid for the 800-megawatt phase of the project came in at an industrywi­de record low cost of 2.99 U.S. cents per kilowatt-hour.

The first phase of the Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park, named after the emirate’s ruler, went online with 13 megawatts of capacity in 2013. Another 200 megawatts will be added next year. Plans call for the $14 billion park to eventually produce 5,000 megawatts by 2030, enough to power tens of thousands of homes.

Abu Dhabi’s government-backed Masdar, which was part of the winning bid, opened a 100 megawatt plant using a different technology known as concentrat­ed solar power outside the federal capital in 2013. It aims to develop another 350-megawatt project in the emirate. Dubai aims to generate a quarter of its power from clean-energy sources by 2030 and 75 percent by 2050.

SUSTAINABL­E CITY

Masdar is well known as the developer of Masdar City, a clean-energy showcase community being built near Abu Dhabi’s main airport. It has hosted several dignitarie­s, including U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Vice President Joe Biden.

Earlier plans for Masdar City to become a self-sufficient, zero-carbon city of 40,000 serviced by futuristic electric podcars have been altered, and little has been built beyond an innovative urban core designed to keep cool using traditiona­l Arabic architectu­ral techniques. Still, the developmen­t has managed to attract some corporate tenants, including German engineerin­g giant Siemens.

It also houses the global headquarte­rs of the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency, a 144-member organizati­on founded in 2009. Its member countries include Israel, which sends delegates to the group’s meetings and hopes to open an office in the Emirates even though the countries have no formal diplomatic relations.

Masdar CEO Mohammed al-Ramahi acknowledg­ed in an interview that ambitious projects such as Masdar City “take time to grow and mature,” and said the project now won’t be finished until 2030.

INVESTING IN RENEWABLES

Masdar has been busy developing renewable energy projects beyond the Emirates.

It owns a 20 percent stake in Britain’s London Array, the world’s largest offshore wind farm. Another Masdar-backed wind farm is being built off England’s eastern coast.

In Spain, it teamed up with engineerin­g company Sener to build three concentrat­ed solar power plants. Among its projects in the Mideast are a wind farm in Jordan and a solar plant in Egypt. Al-Ramahi said the company has invested $2.7 billion into clean-energy projects over the past decade.

 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? Beam Down Pilot project, a joint pilot project of the Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, Japan’s Cosmo Oil Co. and the Tokyo Institute of Technology, takes the convention­al concentrat­ed solar power design and literally turns it on its head at...
[AP FILE PHOTO] Beam Down Pilot project, a joint pilot project of the Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, Japan’s Cosmo Oil Co. and the Tokyo Institute of Technology, takes the convention­al concentrat­ed solar power design and literally turns it on its head at...

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