Saudi Gazette - Morocco launches solar mega-project
The largest of its kind in the world, according to Mustapha Bakkoury,
the head of Morocco’s solar energy agency MASEN, the thermo-solar plant
will cost 7 billion dirhams (630 million euros) and is slated for
completion in 2015, the official MAP news agency reported.
The ambitious project “reinforces the will... to optimize the
exploitation of Morocco’s natural resources, to preserve its
environment... and sustain its development,” Bakkoury said at the
ceremony which was attended by King Mohammed VI.
A consortium led by Saudi developer ACWA Power won the contract to build
the plant, near Morocco’s desert gateway city, last September.
The World Bank, the African Development Bank and the European Investment Bank are helping to finance the solar complex.
It is the first of a two-phase project, due for completion in 2020, that
is expected to cover 3,000 hectares and have a generation capacity of
500 megawatts, enough to met the electricity needs of Ouarzazate’s 1.5
million residents.
MASEN’s Bakkoury said in March that companies bidding for the second
phase of the project had to submit their proposals by mid-April, with
the contract to be awarded sometime next year.
The North African country is aiming to become a world-class renewable
energy producer, and is eyeing the chance to export clean electricity to
neighboring Europe.
Morocco expects to build five new solar plants by the end of the decade
with a combined production capacity of 2,000 megawatts and at an
estimated cost of nine billion dollars (6.9 billion euros).
The kingdom has no oil and gas reserves to speak of and is hoping, with
the solar projects, along with a string of planned wind farms along its
Atlantic coast, to raise renewable energy production to 42 percent of
its total power supply mix by 2020. — AFP
No comments:
Post a Comment