Photo: Dubai’s iconic Burj al-Arab. The oil wealthy Gulf Coast country is planning a $3B solar project in 2013
As debates over solar power tariffs rage among governments in China, the US, and Europe, and many in the United States forecast stagnant or declining growth for the green energy in the upcoming months (or even years) a solar power renaissance is occurring in the least likely of places: the Middle East.
Americans high on prospect of becoming the one of the world’s largest exporters of fossil fuels, due to recent innovations in shale gas extraction might do well to look at what many of world’s biggest oil and gas exporters are doing to foster green energy growth in their own countries.
Reporting from Doha for the Financial Times, Pilita Clark said Saudi Arabia is beginning to consider growing its solar power industry, after
“years of growth in Saudi Arabia and others in the oil-rich Gulf region that mean countries are now burning so much of their own oil and gas resources they could become net fuel importers within 20 years…”
Clark reports that Saudia Arabia has already said it wants to encourage more than $100B in renewable energy investment. The bulk of this will be in solar.
Qatar is currently the world’s leading exporter of liquefied natural gas—precisely the market that the United States is beginning to enter.
Qatar has also made recent investments in solar power, and is betting that recent improvements in power grid technology will enable the country to easily trade energy with its Gulf Coast neighbors and countries beyond.
“Let me compare it to something: cloud computing,” said Mohammed al-Attiya, chairman of Qatar’s National Food Security Program. “I see the future where power generation could be anywhere and people just get their electricity from places simply because grids are being integrated.”
The integrated system al-Attiya is referring to is Desertec, a project undertaken to connect power grids in the Gulf Coast and North African regions, and ultimately to Europe and beyond.
The idea behind Desertec was simple—use vast tracts of empty sun-drenched desert land to build solar power farms and send power out to other regions of the world.
Some have been skeptical of the project, arguing that actually building something so extensive will require tremendous investments and coordinated efforts among governments in a region that is politically unstable.
Qatar announced at the most recent United Nations climate talks the past that it would be building its first solar power project in 2013, and hopes the investment will produce 2% of the country’s total energy consumption, as part of a larger goal to produce ten times that amount from other renewable energy projects by 2020.
Not to be left out, the Sultanate of Dubai is also building a solar power project intended to produce 1 gigawatt of electricity (about 5 times the amount of Qatar’s planned project).
These countries hope that solar power could be as much a profitable export in the future as oil has been in the past.
Almost 200 countries voted to extend the Kyoto Accord this past week in Doha, Qatar, this past week, and most developed European nations are among them. Europe will likely need to invest a great deal in renewable energy to meet the legally binding carbon emissions requirements set forth by the agreement.
This may create a new source of demand for solar power, and the desert countries to Europe’s southwest might in an excellent position to supply it.


