Arab News

ACWA eyes supporting solar panel manufactur­ing in KSA

Company plans to double power production capacity by 2025 and expand operations to 25 markets

- Reuters Abu Dhabi Shuttersto­ck

ACWA Power is considerin­g supporting the manufactur­ing of solar panels in KSA, its

CEO said, as the power and water plants developer seeks to facilitate Saudi Arabia’s plans to develop its renewable power industry.

Riyadh-based ACWA Power, partly owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), does not plan to become a manufactur­er of solar panels, but is “open to the idea of supporting and enabling the right environmen­t in the Kingdom to welcome in manufactur­ers,” a spokesman told Reuters.

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and SoftBank Chief Executive Masayoshi Son announced in March last year a plan for the world’s biggest solar power project in Saudi Arabia, a project expected to have the capacity to produce up to 200 gigawatts (GW) by 2030.

The project is set to create thousands of jobs and develop a manufactur­ing industry in line with Saudi Arabia’s economic diversific­ation plans laid out in its Vision 2030.

ACWA Power plans to double its power production capacity by 2025 and to expand its operations to 25 markets from the current 12. “We expect renewables to be a significan­t part of that growth,” ACWA’s CEO, Paddy Padmanatha­n said.

ACWA mandated banks last year to sell a 30 percent stake through an initial public offering (IPO). Sources told Reuters at the time that JPMorgan, Citigroup, Natixis and Riyad Capital had been appointed to advise on that process.

Padmanatha­n said on Monday that the IPO was postponed as the company had a lot of preparator­y work to do and its balance sheet had to be “positioned in the right way,” but added that the company is still committed to a listing, and the banks that were mandated have retained their role.

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