Cheap solar energy plants to spread throughout Middle East

Saudi firm confirms lowest bid for DEWA solar project

TO GO WITH STORY BY ALI KHALIL
Journalists visit the Shams 1, Concentrated Solar power (CSP) plant, in al-Gharibiyah district on the outskirts of Abu Dhabi, on March 17, 2013 during the inauguration of the facility. Oil-rich Abu Dhabi officially opened the world's largest Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) plant, which cost $600 million to build and will provide electricity to 20,000 homes. AFP PHOTO/MARWAN NAAMANI / AFP PHOTO / MARWAN NAAMANI
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Solar plants that supply electricity at competitive prices after the sun goes down are about to become a reality in the Middle East, according to one of the region’s biggest developers of power plants.

The Acwa Power International chief executive Paddy Padmanathan confirmed his company is the low bidder on a US$1 billion project that will feed electricity to the grid for the Dubai Electricity and Water Authority between 4pm and 10am. More such plants are likely to follow because Chinese companies will start driving down the cost of equipment, he said.

Acwa, which is based in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, bid 9.45 cents per kilowatt-hour - a figure first reported by The National last month - , almost cutting in half the cost of concentrated-solar power (CSP). Each of the bidders were also asked to submit an alternative tender. The off-taker will choose between the bid and the alternative bid, so the price may be even lower.

The 200-megawatt Dubai contract, which runs for 25 years, will harness the two-decade CSP technology, or solar thermal. Unlike photovoltaics (PV), which generate a charge directly from the sun’s power, thermal plants use mirrors to concentrate heat on water, turning it to steam to drive a turbine. The heat can be stored in molten salt to be used later. The technology to date has slipped behind PV on cost but is quickly becoming more competitive, the executive said.

“I expect concentrated-solar power, within 18 months, to be head-to-head with combined-cycle gas, if not more competitive,” Mr Padmanathan said in London. “The focus has been on PV and batteries, but there’s a limit on how long they can hold a charge for. We’re proving that CSP can work through the night.”

Since it can retain heat, the plant can keep working after dark. The sun’s energy in some cases can heat molten salt to 490°C, which allows operators to predict when electricity will flow.

There are 319 gigawatts of photovoltaic panels installed worldwide, compared to about 5 gigawatts of solar thermal, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance data. The mass deployment has driven down costs of solar panel equipment by about 70 per cent since 2010, with the latest record set in Abu Dhabi at 2.45 US cents per kilowatt-hour. In comparison, solar thermal was around 15 to 18 cents per kilowatt-hour until recently.

China hosts 80 per cent of the world’s PV solar manufacturing industry. The nation’s expertise at mass production is credited with making solar panels more affordable, although companies are now reviving work on thermal technology.

“There are currently just two suppliers in solar CSP,” Mr Padmanathan said. “The others have gone bankrupt. I know of at least five Chinese companies that are starting to enter the market.”

Acwa has also built similar projects in Morocco's Noor solar complex and South Africa's desert. One is operating in each nation, with two more in Morocco and one in South Africa currently under development. Acwa is also seeking to build two more projects in Morocco in the Midelt area, which will have a joint capacity of 350 megawatts.

“I’m also hoping to build one in Saudi,” Mr Padmanathan said. “Right now they’re tendering for solar PV and wind, but I think they’ll want a CSP project as well, especially when they see how cost competitive it can be.”

Bloomberg