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Tuesday, 14 February 2017
OPEC's Top Producer Saudi Is Turning to Wind and Solar Power
The nation most identified with its massive oil reserves
is turning to wind and solar to generate power at home and help extend
the life of its crucial crude franchise.
Starting this year, Saudi Arabia
plans to develop almost 10 gigawatts of renewable energy by 2023,
starting with wind and solar plants in its vast northwestern desert. The
effort could replace the equivalent of 80,000 barrels of oil a day now
burned for power. Add in natural gas projects set to start later this
decade, and the Saudis could quadruple that number, according to Wood MacKenzie Ltd. That could supplant all the crude burned in the kingdom during its winter months.
The
effort goes hand-in-hand with a drive by the royal family to broaden
the economy following two years of budget deficits tied to low oil
prices. More industry, though, means more energy, with the amount of
power used at peak times growing by 10 percent in the last year alone.
“Renewable energy is not a luxury anymore,” said Mario Maratheftis, chief economist at Standard Chartered Plc., in an interview. "If domestic use continues like this, eventually the Saudis won’t have spare oil to export.’’
In
all, Saudi Arabia is seeking $30 billion to $50 billion worth of
investment in renewables, Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said this
month. The ministry will set up a division to handle the tenders until
the country establishes a new independent buyer for all power supplies.
“The
terms on renewable contracts will be motivating so that the cost of
generating power from these renewable sources will be the lowest in the
world,” Al-Falih said at a news conference in Riyadh. The kingdom will
award its first tenders to build 700 megawatts of solar and wind energy in September, Al-Falih said.
Energy Pricing
The
government has already raised domestic energy prices to slow demand
growth and called for greater efficiency, according to the Riyadh-based
King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center. Failing to tap more
sources, including renewable energy, natural gas or even nuclear
reactors could erode the oil exports still vital to the economy, the
center wrote in an October report.
Improving the country’s energy
efficiency by just 4 percent a year could save the equivalent of 1
million barrels a day of crude by 2030, according to the report.
The cornerstone of an economic transformation plan championed
by Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, a son of the king, is the
sale of as much as 5 percent of Saudi Arabian Oil Co. With the company worth about $2 trillion, according to estimates from the prince, the share sale would be the worlds’ largest initial public offering.
The kingdom, OPEC’s biggest member, is the linchpin of the group’s effort to prop up crude prices by cutting output
to reduce a global supply glut. Saudi Arabia said it cut production by
717,600 barrels a day last month, its biggest cut in more than eight
years, to 9.748 million a day, according to a monthly report from the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Aramco Plants
Saudi
Aramco, as the state energy producer is known, already earns most of
the Persian Gulf kingdom’s income by pumping 1 in every 10 barrels sold
every day. It’s also driving the country’s first steps toward a
renewable energy industry.
At its sprawling campus of office buildings, control
rooms and suburban-style residential compounds in Dhahran in the
country’s east, Saudi Aramco runs the country’s biggest solar plant, a
10 megawatt facility mounted on a parking lot roof. In January, it
started the kingdom’s first commercial wind turbine
to power a facility in the northwest. The solar panels atop the parking
facility cut the need for the equivalent of about 30,000 barrels of oil
and the wind turbines will eliminate demand for about 19,000 barrels,
according to Aramco.As the kingdom strives to build industries and spread jobs, other state companies are expanding projects. The Saudi Arabian Mining Co.
operates a phosphate plant and is building a new industrial city in the
northwest. Power for sections of the vast area where those projects are
located will partly come from renewables and new gas projects.
“Small
projects are very important in helping diversify the country’s energy
sources,” Stewart Williams, Wood Mackenzie’s vice president for Middle
East research said in a telephone interview. “These are steps toward
building up the country’s energy base.”
Without
alternative power sources, including gas and renewables, the kingdom
would be forced to increase its crude burn. That can reach as high as
900,000 barrels a day during the kingdom’s summer months, according to
data from the Joint Organisations Data Initiative.
Saudi Arabia
has already taken steps to substitute natural gas for oil in power
plants, a change that’s had “immense” impact on the crude burn, OPEC
said in its Monthly Oil Market Report released in January. The use of
crude for domestic power has fallen by nearly a third since the Wasit
gas plant began operations in March 2016, according to the OPEC report.
300,000 Barrels
Saudi
Aramco will bring online the similar-sized Fadhili gas project in the
country’s east by the end of the decade. That gas project and the
renewable projects planned for completion by 2023 could save about
300,000 barrels of oil from being burnt for power, according to
estimates based on IEA and OPEC data.
Alternative energies are “a key factor in the economic transformation,’’ Fabio Scacciavillani, chief economist of the Oman Investment Fund,
said in an interview. “This region has a great competitive advantage in
low-cost energy production and that will continue with renewables. That
will create a big advantage particularly in energy intensive
industries.’’
source: https://www.bloomberg.com
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