The National - News

ACWA COMPLETES DEAL ON SOUTH AFRICAN SOLAR POWER INVESTMENT

Agreement to build Redstone energy plant comes after South African President’s visit to Saudi Arabia

- JENNIFER GNANA

Saudi renewables developer Acwa Power has signed an agreement with South Africa’s Central Energy Fund to co-invest in a 100 megawatts concentrat­ed solar power (CSP) project in the country’s North Cape province.

The Redstone project will move into constructi­on phase later this year and will feature energy storage technology, allowing energy utilisatio­n even after dark. The facility is expected to dispatch about 480,000 megawatt hours (MWh) per year, Acwa Power said.

“With capital and operating cost of CSP plants with molten salt storage solution reducing at the same time as demand for cost-competitiv­e renewable energy increases in South Africa, our Redstone CSP plant will be able to deliver stable cost-competitiv­e electricit­y supply to more than 210,000 South African homes during peak demand periods which are during the night,” said Acwa Power chief executive Paddy Padmanatha­n.

The investment will be the first in South Africa for Acwa Power, which has primarily invested in the Middle East and North Africa region, as well as renewables schemes in Jordan. The announceme­nt follows a pledge by Saudi Arabia to invest about $10 billion in the African nation following the visit of President Cyril Ramaphosa to Jeddah on Thursday.

South Africa, which derives much of its power generation requiremen­ts from burning coal, is also dependent on oil to meet its energy needs. The biggest supplier of crude to the African nation is Saudi Arabia, which meets about 47 per cent of its requiremen­t. It also relies on imports from Oman, Iraq and the UAE, which accounts for 4.5 per cent of the global crude production.

The UAE also announced plans for $10bn worth of investment­s into Africa’s second biggest economy, official news agency Wam said. Mr Ramaphosa visited Abu Dhabi on Friday as part of his Middle East tour.

The African nation is looking to change its energy mix and its fund, in which Acwa Power will become an investor, is key to that strategy. The fund comprises a consortium of companies dedicated to finding solutions to meet South African energy requiremen­ts as well as other countries in the sub-Saharan African region.

It is pursuing developmen­t of hydrocarbo­ns, biomass and wind as well as the other renewable resources in the region to achieve its objective. The fund also manages the developmen­t of oil and gas assets on behalf of the South African government.

Acwa Power’s joint investment in South Africa’s Redstone will involve the CSP plant being developed using a central salt receiver technology with 12 hours of thermal storage that will allow the facility to generate power during peak demand periods.

The central tower solution for the project, which has also been deployed in Acwa Power’s other CSP project in Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Solar Park in Dubai is expected to generate cost efficienci­es by more than doubling MWh output of electrical energy per rated megawatt capacity.

Salt-based solutions have become a more popular and relatively inexpensiv­e method to store energy in comparison with other solutions such as photovolta­ic or wind-based schemes linked to utility scale batteries.

Acwa Power chairman Mohammad Abunayyan said the Riyadh developer was looking to “explore more opportunit­ies” in South Africa to increase production capacity and lower costs.

Saudi Arabia this month increased its stake in Acwa Power through its Public Investment Fund, as the world’s largest crude exporter prioritise­s renewable energy developmen­t to free up more barrels to sell in the global oil markets.

Saudi Arabia is expected to tender 4GW of solar and wind projects as it continues to diversify its economy away from oil. The kingdom last year establishe­d a renewables department within the energy ministry, which has largely overseen hydrocarbo­ns, and is expected to tender about $7bn worth of solar and wind schemes this year.

Acwa has also taken a leading role in alternativ­e Saudi power generation. A consortium led by the company was chosen for the kingdom’s first solar plant, a $302 million facility at Sakaka, being developed on independen­t power producer model.

South Africa, which derives much of its power generation requiremen­ts from burning coal, is also dependent on oil

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