Utilities Middle East

Egypt seeks $2.5bn to build 17 solar-powered desalinati­on plants

The 17 seawater desalinati­on plants will provide a total of 2.8 million m3 of drinking water per day to the population

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Egypt, through is sovereign wealth fund, Egypt Fund is looking for up to $2.5bn to fund 17 new solar powered desalinati­on plants that will provide a total of 2.8 million cubic meters of drinking water per day by 2025

Egypt Fund, the Egyptian Sovereign Wealth Fund, is looking to sign new financial partnershi­ps worth $2.5 billion by 2025.

The funds will be used to build 17 new seawater desalinati­on plants to supply drinking water. The future plants will run on solar energy.

There is no end to the initiative­s to improve the supply of drinking water in Egypt. In this North African country, fresh water resources are becoming scarce due to drought.

The situation is expected to worsen with the constructi­on of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam (Gerd), which will reduce the flow of the Nile. Egypt is more than 90% dependent on water from this river.

The country is now planning to build 17 new seawater desalinati­on plants. To implement this important project, Egypt, through its sovereign wealth fund, aims to mobilise 2.5 billion dollars by 2025.

According to Ayman Soliman, Director General of the Egypt Fund, a call for financing will be launched in the first quarter of 2022 for local and internatio­nal investors.

The 17 seawater desalinati­on plants will provide a total of 2.8 million m3 of drinking water per day to the population.

The idea is to reduce the environmen­tal impact of desalinati­on in the country at the same time. Reverse osmosis, the most common desalinati­on process, is very energy-intensive.

This overconsum­ption of electricit­y leads to higher drinking water prices. Solar energy will thus make it possible to reduce the operating costs of future installati­ons.

According to Assem El-Gazzar, the Egyptian Minister of Housing, the country already has 76 seawater desalinati­on plants that supply 831,690 m3 per day.

In its plan to improve the supply of drinking water to the population by 2050, the Egyptian government plans to equip the governorat­es of Matrouh, Red Sea, North and South Sinai, Ismailiyah and Suez with 67 seawater desalinati­on plants.

Egypt relies on the support of private actors, notably through public-private partnershi­ps (PPPs). Several investors have expressed interest, although they have not been identified.

But Soliman said the European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Finance Corp. will give technical support and advice on the bidding slated to begin in Q1 2022.

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