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Crude awakening: Saudi Arabia plots shift from oil to renewables

The kingdom is trying to tie its future to another natural resource it has in abundance: sunlight, writes Stanley Reed of The New York Times

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Life

in Saudi Arabia has long been defined by the oil that flows from the kingdom. Over decades, the vast wealth it pumped out paid not just for gleaming towers and shopping malls but also for a government sector that employs a majority of working Saudis.

Now, Saudi Arabia is trying to tie its future to another natural resource it has in abundance: sunlight.

The world’s largest oil exporter is embarking, under Prince Mohammed bin Salman, on an ambitious effort to diversify its economy and reinvigora­te growth, in part by plowing money into renewable energy.

The Saudi government wants not just to reshape its energy mix at home but also to emerge as a global force in clean power.

Reaching that goal is a big if. But the strategy is finally making progress after fits and starts.

Riyadh earlier this month tapped ACWA Power, a Saudi energy company, to build a solar farm that would generate enough electricit­y to power up to 200,000 homes.

The project will cost $300 million and create hundreds of jobs, according to Turki al-Shehri, head of the kingdom’s renewable energy programme.

By the end of the year, Saudi Arabia aims to invest up to $7 billion to develop seven new solar plants and a big wind farm.

The country hopes that renewables, which now represent a negligible amount of the energy it uses, will be able to provide as much as 10% of its power generation by the end of 2023.

“All the big developers are watching,” said Jenny Chase, an analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance, a market research firm.

“The country has made grand plans and pronouncem­ents, but various bodies within it have failed to agree on the new way forward,” she added, referring to the agreement as “the first step in creating what is widely expected to be a major market.”

Saudi Arabia has talked a big game when it comes to renewables. It adopted ambitious targets for green power several years ago, but no major projects were carried out.

The country’s biggest solar farm in operation covers a parking lot of the national oil company, Saudi Aramco, in Dhahran. Lying just a couple of miles from a fenced-off area honouring the country’s first commercial­ly viable oil well, it generates enough power for a nearby office block.

Still, the experiment with solar power has been an important catalyst, and the company built a team of experts in renewables power. The experience helped Saudi Arabia focus on convention­al solar panels over another system, known as concentrat­ed solar, in which mirrors focus sunlight to create heat.

The renewables strategy finally started to take real shape when Khaled al-Falih took over as energy minister in 2016.

Falih made solar and wind a priority for the kingdom, and set up a new unit last year to expedite the work. Much of the staff was drawn from Aramco.

Shehri, who had worked at Aramco before leading the kingdom’s renewables programme, said he faced an “extremely challengin­g” task.

Meeting Saudi Arabia’s targets would require contracts for a series of new facilities to be awarded by the end of 2020.

“The only way this was possible,” Shehri said, “was because we have done previous work.”

Saudi Arabia, with its vast oil resources, would seem an unlikely champion for renewables. But the country’s location and climate mean it has plenty of promising sites for solar and wind farms.

The costs of installing and operating those two technologi­es have fallen drasticall­y around the world in recent years. That means that even in a country where oil is plentiful, renewables beckon as a cheap, and clean, alternativ­e to traditiona­l fossil fuels.

For the project announced earlier this month, Riyadh received bids for the solar farm, which will be built in Sakaka, in northern Saudi Arabia, that rivaled the lowest ever submitted at auctions anywhere.

“At two to three cents per kilowatt-hour, a wholesale measure of electricit­y, solar power here would be below the cost of fossil fuel-generated electricit­y,’’ Shehri said.

“Just look at the prices,” Chase said. “That is why they are doing it.”

A big push into wind and solar power would also have other benefits, notably allowing Saudi Arabia to sell more of its oil.

Saudis rely on air-conditione­rs for much of the year, and the scorching Arabian summer sends demand for power soaring. Much of that electricit­y today is generated at power plants fueled by oil.

Last June, the facilities burned an average of 680,000 barrels of oil a day, according to data supplied by the Joint Organizati­ons Data Initiative, a monitoring group.

That figure — comparable to the output of a modest-size oil-producing country like Egypt — was down from nearly 900,000 barrels a day in 2015, but it still essentiall­y represents wasted cash. Had it been sold overseas, that crude could have added $47 million a day to government revenue, at current prices.

Selling oil internatio­nally is central to funding the Saudi budget.

The terms of the Sakaka project’s auction required that developers pay the upfront cost of the solar farm, in return for payments for the power they supply to the grid.

That would allow Saudi Arabia to continue focusing on producing and exporting oil while it makes the shift to cleaner power.

In the 1920s, the area surroundin­g the Aramco offices here was little more than a series of rocky hills. But then a team of American geologists discovered crude, and everything changed.

Dhahran is now home to the headquarte­rs of one of the world’s most advanced and prolific energy companies, with a series of research laboratori­es, training centres and even a golf course on site.

What had been a scattering of small towns is now a major metropolit­an area housing around four million people.

A major plank of the crown prince’s plan to transform the Saudi economy involves finding jobs for

All the big developers are watching. JENNY CHASE AN ANALYST AT BLOOMBERG NEW ENERGY FINANCE

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 ??  ?? Saudi Arabia’s biggest solar farm in operation covers a parking lot of the national oil company, Saudi Aramco in Dhahran.
Saudi Arabia’s biggest solar farm in operation covers a parking lot of the national oil company, Saudi Aramco in Dhahran.
 ??  ?? Saudi Arabia, with its vast oil resources, would seem an unlikely champion for renewables. But the country’s location and climate mean it has plenty of promising sites for solar and wind farms.
Saudi Arabia, with its vast oil resources, would seem an unlikely champion for renewables. But the country’s location and climate mean it has plenty of promising sites for solar and wind farms.
 ??  ?? What had been a scattering of small towns in Dhahran, Saudi Aramco’s hometown, is now a major metropolli­tan area housing around four million people.
What had been a scattering of small towns in Dhahran, Saudi Aramco’s hometown, is now a major metropolli­tan area housing around four million people.
 ??  ?? 3D rendering is used to teach students at the Saudi Aramco Upstream Profession­al Developmen­t Center in Dhahran.
3D rendering is used to teach students at the Saudi Aramco Upstream Profession­al Developmen­t Center in Dhahran.

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