Saudi Arabia Renewable Energy Solar & Wind 2018
+91 22 48803419
aditi@bricsaconsulting.com
https://bricsaconsulting.com/event/saudi-a...
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Business Details
Start Date
26 Nov 2018
End Date
27 Nov 2018
Focus
Renewable Energy
International / National
National
Ⅰ. Introduction:
The kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, is expected to lead Renewable Energy Developments in the coming years with up to $7 billion worth, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency. The kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which largely relies on oil to generate power, has set ambitious targets to add 9.5GW of renewable energy by 2023, as it looks to sell more of its crude oil to export markets. As per the Vision 2030, the Ministry of Energy, Industry, and Mineral Resources (MEIM) are expected to tender 3.25GW of solar and 800Megawatts of wind capacity this year alone. The kingdom's inaugural 400MW wind project received global interest. It expects to commence $7 billion worth of renewable energy projects this year, with solar plants leading the way.
Saudi Arabia has an impressive natural potential for solar and wind power, and the local energy consumption will increase threefold by 2030, the country still lack competitive renewable energy sector at present. In the wake of these events, Bricsa Consulting has developed this agenda to bring renewable energy sector leaders across the globe under one roof and discuss various facets of Renewable Energy. Despite the kingdom's clear strengths in solar and wind energy, the Vision 2030 is yet to have a competitive space in the global market. The kingdom aims to review the legal and regulatory framework that allows the private sector to purchase and invest in the renewable energy sector. It also focuses to localize the energy industry and produce the necessary skill-sets for local resource development; they will also encourage Public-Private Partnerships (PPP). In future, The Kingdom is also looking forward to guaranteeing the competitiveness of Renewable Energy through the gradual liberalization of the fuel market.
Ⅱ. Conference Highlights:
● National Renewable Energy Plan (NREP)
● NEOM - Mega City Powered by Renewable Energy
● The Masdar Initiative - Pioneering renewable energy in Middle East
● Dubai Clean Energy Strategy 2050 - UAE towards transforming Dubai as a city with the least carbon foot print in the world
● To recognize the future of Renewable Energy in Saudi Arabia
● To get a better understanding of the opportunities of PPP offered by NREP
● Inception of Masdar initiative and Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Project - Largest single-site Solar Park in the world
https://www.enfsolar.com/directory/...nt&utm_content=32&utm_campaign=profiles_event
Solar PV demand in MEA set to grow 170% in 2018
Solar power installation in South Africa. Source: Renusol GmbH
August 20 (Renewables Now) - The Middle East and Africa (MEA) region is expected to see a 170% year-on-year surge in solar deployments this year with the addition of 3.6 GW of fresh photovoltaic (PV) capacity, according to GTM Research.
Demand for solar PV is seen to escalate further and lead to 20 GW of annual installations in 2020, while for the whole period between 2018 and 2023, the region will put on stream 83.7 GW of new solar parks. Big projects coming online and the heating African market will be major growth drivers, according to Ben Attia, author of the latest regional market outlook.
The MEA region currently has a 12.3-GW pipeline of utility-scale contracted or under-construction projects and an additional 21 GW of pre-contract projects. Most of those schemes, apart from the UAE and Jordan, come from the utility-scale segment.
Attia forecasts that in 2018, demand is expected to be mainly driven by Egypt, the UAE and Morocco, while nascent African markets are anticipated to mature in 2020 and add more than 6.4 GW of PV. Overall, the growth pace is seen to slow down after 2020 and lead to a “more measured growth” to 2023 following multiple rounds of regional tender programmes and regulatory adaptation.
In terms of pricing, Attia projects that the levelised costs for both utility-scale and distributed generation solar power will drop by 30% by 2022 in the major MEA markets, with prices falling below USD 30 (EUR 26.2) per MWh in tender rounds in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt and Kuwait.
(USD 1.0 = EUR 0.874)
https://renewablesnow.com/news/solar-pv-demand-in-mea-set-to-grow-170-in-2018-623979/
Ariel Cohen Contributor
Energy
I cover energy, security, Europe, Russia/Eurasia & the Middle East
In this Sunday, July 8, 2018, photograph, 2018 Model 3 sedans sit on display outside a Tesla showroom in Littleton, Colo. Board members at Tesla are evaluating CEO and Chairman Elon Musk’s $72 billion proposal to take the electric car and solar panel maker private. Six of nine members say in a statement Wednesday, Aug. 8, that Musk began talking with the board about the move last week. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Since the beginning of 2017, the managers of Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund have
approached Elon Musk and his iconoclastic Tesla Inc. (
NYSE:TSLA) numerous times in an effort to acquire a stake in the innovative all-electric auto manufacturer. So what does a mammoth petro-state want with a company determined to “accelerate the world’s transition to a sustainable energy future” -- and put Big Oil out of business? The answer to this dialectic is Financial Planning 101: portfolio diversification.
Not to mention Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s (MBS) love of everything new and shiny.
The Kingdom has launched a technological, financial, political, and cultural development program known as “
Saudi Arabia Vision 2030.” One policy goal of the ambitious roadmap is to decouple fossil fuels from the nation’s identity, instead promoting the digitization, privatization, and decarbonization of the Saudi economy.
Unemployment rates remain high – especially among Saudi youth – which can lead to political and social volatility (remember the
Arab Spring of 2010 - 2011). Vision 2030 aims to accommodate the burgeoning working-age population by growing as-of-yet underdeveloped sectors like tech, services, and renewable energy.
As it stands today, 50% of Saudi government
revenue comes from oil sales. According to the IMF, the Kingdom’s fiscal breakeven point per barrel of oil is in the
$83 - $87 range, meaning that today’s oil prices are insufficient to meet its budgetary needs. Saudi Arabia has projected a budget deficit of 195 billion riyals ($52 billion) in 2018, or 7.3% of GDP, down from 230 billion riyals last year, which is unsustainable in the long term.
What better way to hedge your portfolio than to bet on the company that wants to make your main asset obsolete?
Last week, Tesla CEO Elon Musk took to
Twitter announcing his intent to take Tesla private with financial support from the
Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) at $420 per share -- giving Tesla Inc. a $70 billion valuation. According to Musk, the move would free Tesla from shareholder scrutiny and allow the company to better protect information about its business practices.
While the funding was not as ‘
secure’ as Musk had hoped, Riyadh does hold 5% of Tesla stock as of July 31st. It is highly likely that PIF will pursue opportunities to invest further once Musk is cleared of any potential
wrongdoing by the SEC regarding his impulsive twitter announcement, especially if MSB remains enthusiastic about the deal.
PIF’s minority stake in Tesla Inc. is just one piece of the Kingdom’s expanding renewables portfolio. KSA plans to have 3.45 gigawatts of renewable (solar and wind) power online by 2020, with
$7 billion invested in green projects just this year. Total renewables capacity is expected to reach 9 gigawatts by 2023. Having Tesla’s expertise would boost Saudi’s budding romance with solar and electric power.
Saudi Arabia's commitment to going green is further illustrated by their plans for
Neom, a $500 billion economic hub in the country’s Red Sea province of Tabuk. The futuristic mega-city would be more than 12 times the size of Tokyo and is designed to run solely on renewable generation. There, non-fossil fuel sectors would take center stage, encompasisng everything from biotech to entertainment and manufacturing. Tech giants like Amazon (
NYSE:AMZN) and aerospace powerhouse Lockheed Martin (
NYSE:LMT) are being
courted to invest in Neom and other parts of the Kingdom to set the precedent for economic modernization.
Saudi Arabia is set to break ground on its first solar plant later this year, a $302 million, 300MW solar photovoltaic facility FAHAD SHADEED / REUTERS
The Neom model of renewable energy generation could serve as a blueprint for the rest of the country's power sector. Riyadh enjoys an impressive
300 hours of sunlight per month making it an ideal candidate for solar photovoltaic (PV) power. Owing to its overabundance of oil, the Kingdom is one of the few nations which still burns crude to produce electricity despite the method's gross inefficiencies (an astounding
40% of the country's powercame from oil in 2016). Less oil used in power production will mean cleaner air and more supplies available for export.
Moreover, the Saudis are hopeful that a stable flow of domestic renewable energy can help it cope with increasingly-volatile oil market fluctuations. The severe oil price swings of 2014-2015 actually catalyzed the launch of the Vision 2030 diversification strategy.
One of the key tests of Saudi Arabia’s reform efforts is the government’s plan to sell off a 5% stake of Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest energy producer, through an initial public offering (IPO) proposed earlier this year. MSB initially touted a company valuation of $2 trillion – twice that of Apple. But due to a lack of appetite from investors, the proposal remains
shelved until 2019.
If realized, the IPO would help raise cash, cover budget deficits, boost Saudi diversification, and pave the way for deals like the one with Tesla to set the course for future development. The kingdom’s economy is set to
expand by 2 percent in 2018 according to the Institute of International Finance.
The talks between the IPF and Tesla indicate a bold hedging strategy by the KSA Government. Focusing investment in Tesla would enhance Saudi expertise in solar power and simultaneously grow its own market for electric cars. A shift to electric vehicles and greater renewable power generation will also facilitate the planned draw-down of Saudi gasoline subsidies, a politically charged policy which amounts to billions of dollars in
lost revenueeach year.
A Saudi capital infusion into Tesla Inc. would provide a life raft for the Kingdom’s oil-laden economy, and solve Elon's recurrent problems with critical analysts and demanding shareholders.
Who said oil and Musk don’t mix?
James C. Grant, Program Manager at International Market Analysis Ltd, contributed to this article
https://www.forbes.com/sites/arielc...lows-saudi-arabia-and-tesla-inc/#7df7f209221e