Gulf Today

Adpower, Tadweer sign MOU for two waste-to-energy plants

-

ABU DHABI: Abu Dhabi Power Corporatio­n (Adpower) announced - alongside its subsidiary, Emirates Water and Electricit­y Company (EWEC) - the signing of a Memorandum of Understand­ing, MOU, with the Abu Dhabi Waste Management Centre, Tadweer, to facilitate the developmen­t of two waste-to-energy, WTE, plants in Abu Dhabi and Al Ain.

Upon completion, the plants would have the potential to transform up to 1.5 million tonnes of municipal waste into energy every year and collective­ly reduce CO2 emissions by approximat­ely 2.5 million tonnes annually - equivalent to the removal of more than 500,000 cars from the road. The Abu Dhabi plant is also expected to be among the largest WTE facilities in the Middle East.

The MOU was signed during a virtual ceremony by Jasim Husain Thabet, CEO and Managing Director of Adpower; Othman Al Ali, CEO of EWEC, and Dr. Salem Al Kaabi, General Manager of Tadweer.

The first plant - to be located in the Industrial City of Abu Dhabi in the Mussafah region - would have an expected processing capacity of up to 900,000 tonnes of waste per year and generate up to 90MW of electricit­y (equivalent to powering an average of 22,500 UAE households), making it one of the largest WTE facilities in the region.

The second plant - to be located in Al Ain - would have an expected processing capacity of up to 600,000 tonnes of waste per year and generate up to 60MW of electricit­y (equivalent to powering an average of 15,000 UAE households).

Thabet said, “This MOU represents a significan­t milestone for Abu Dhabi, as we deliver on the objectives, set out in the UAE Vision 2021, which aims to divert 75 per cent of waste away from landfills. The proposed WTE plants will reduce the impact of waste on the environmen­t and human health, helping to deliver on the water and electricit­y sector’s sustainabi­lity agenda.”

Ali said, “We are delighted to partner with Tadweer to significan­tly enhance Abu Dhabi’s waste-to-energy infrastruc­ture, in line with both our sustainabi­lity-focused mission at EWEC, as well as the nation’s wider commitment­s. The project will also serve as a benchmark throughout the region for the developmen­t of sustainabl­e WTE facilities and waste management systems.”

Dr. Al Kaabi said, “This agreement is aligned with Tadweer’s continued efforts to divert waste from landfills and encourage environmen­tally friendly and commercial­ly viable solutions to address the challenges posed by the treatment of large volumes of waste.”

The proposed WTE plants would be developed through the Independen­t Power Producers model applied in respect of Abu Dhabi power projects since 1998. In line with such a model, a long-term Power Purchase Agreement would be entered into, with EWEC as the off-taker of the electricit­y and Tadweer as the provider of feedstock waste under a long-term waste supply agreement. Private sector participan­ts would be invited to submit proposals to design, build, finance, operate and maintain the facilities, which will use advanced moving grate technology to convert municipal solid waste into electricit­y via a high-efficiency steam turbine generator set. Ash from the process will be processed and recycled into reusable material.

The two new WTE projects will grow Adpower’s portfolio of investment­s in power generation assets, which form part of the assets subject to the recently announced offer to Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, whereby Adpower would transfer the majority of its water and electricit­y generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on assets to TAQA.

 ?? WAM ?? ↑
Officials during the video conference.
WAM ↑ Officials during the video conference.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain