Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on March 17, 2013

Bookmark and Share

UAE opens first big solar energy plant – Reuters

UAE opens first big solar energy plant – Reuters thumbnail

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Sunday officially opened its first big solar energy plant, the three companies behind the project said in a statement.

The 100-megawatt (MW) Shams 1 concentrated solar plant (CSP) took the UAE’s Masdar, France’s Total and Spain’s Abengoa three years to build at a cost of around $600 million.

Shams 1 is one of the largest CSP projects in the world and by far the largest solar plant in a fossil fuel reliant region that lags far behind much of Europe, the Americas and Asia in renewable energy.

“The region is faced with meeting its rising demand for energy, while also working to reduce its carbon footprint,” Masdar Chief Executive Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber said in a statement to mark the opening of the plant.

The UAE’s richest emirate is targeting 7 percent of electricity from alternative sources by 2020. By comparison, that goal was exceeded by 21 of the 27 EU member states four years ago.

Despite vast expanses of empty desert and intense year-round sunshine, solar energy has struggled to take off in the Gulf where heavily subsidized fossil fuel makes green investments less attractive than in countries that subsidies renewables and tax fuels.

Shams 1 capacity, which is 10 times larger than the next largest plant in the country, is enough to supply 20,000 UAE homes and will be especially useful for meeting peak demand on hot summer days.

By comparison, Germany and Spain have installed many thousands of megawatts over the last few years, and India has built over 1,200 MW of solar power.

This imbalance in global green investment could be changing, as economic woes limit European spending on expensive green technologies and as wealthy oil and gas exporting countries of the Gulf try to cut the use of fuels that they could export.

Saudi Arabia, which has said it aims to becoming a major generator of solar power, has built less than 50 MW so far. It has plans to build up to 41,000 MW of solar power over the next 20 years, more than any country has built so far.

Reuters



4 Comments on "UAE opens first big solar energy plant – Reuters"

  1. Kenz300 on Sun, 17th Mar 2013 11:35 pm 

    Quote — “Saudi Arabia, which has said it aims to becoming a major generator of solar power, has built less than 50 MW so far. It has plans to build up to 41,000 MW of solar power over the next 20 years, more than any country has built so far.”
    ——————————

    Plans to build 41,000 MW of solar power — WOW !

    http://www.renewableenergyfocus.com/view/23051/renewable-energy-outpaces-fossil-fuel-and-nuclear-growth/

    Renewable energy outpaces fossil fuel and nuclear growth

  2. BillT on Sun, 17th Mar 2013 11:40 pm 

    Dreams seldom come true. Saudi Arabia will not be exporting any oil to pay for anything by 2033. In fact, it will have gone through a revolution or two as the Saud family loses power and things change, and change and change…

    Then there is the FACT that it is in a desert. Dust storms? Water to clean the panels? $6 per watt? Lots of ifs and maybes here. And many billions of dollars to make it possible. We shall see.

  3. Norm on Mon, 18th Mar 2013 12:37 am 

    At Grand Coulee Dam they have these monster generators with a drive shaft that is pushing 10 foot in diameter solid steel. Just one of those generators puts out 600mW I know cause I looked at the ‘made in USA’ bronze plaque on it. OK so they need to make 5 more of these just to equal ONE of those handy dandy hydro generators. I dont intend to complain cause I think thats where its headed. They just better keep making more. No problem with dust, lotza guyz making $1 a day over there they will keep it clean. Main problem is no juice at night. Most likely, the trend on that is going to be some grid-scale energy storage in batteries, and drive power back onto the grid electronically at night. Is it a hassle? Oh yeah. Maybe not so good to have 8 Bil people on a planet with carrying capacity of 2 Bil.

    I was here first, so U go away.

  4. Arthur on Mon, 18th Mar 2013 4:40 pm 

    Oil producing countries have the knowledge about the true state of their reserves, as well as (still) the money to invest in something new. This way they can help set the example and initiate a renewable energy industry.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *