Saudis move to accelerate sluggish renewables push
Riyadh’s ambitions to enter the green hydrogen sector sit uncomfortably with a slow renewables build-out
When state oil giant Saudi Aramco made its first foray into blue hydrogen last September, few were surprised. However, the launch two months earlier by government-affiliated Acwa Power of what would be one of the world’s largest green hydrogen projects generated considerably more fanfare—and not only for its size. Saudi Arabia is famously well-endowed with sunshine, but after some 11 years nominally committed to rolling out renewables, installed solar and wind capacity stood at just 413MW at the end of 2020. And domestical electricity requirements are vast. Riyadh is clearly cognisant of the gulf between stated ambition and results, and the renewables programme is accelerating to reflect a n
Also in this section
27 November 2024
The agreement by the parties to raise at least $300b/yr for developing countries by 2035 was derided as a betrayal by the Global South, but the UN urged pragmatism
26 November 2024
Agreements on how to operationalise both Article 6.2 and 6.4 will mean countries can start to trade emissions reductions as part of their contributions to the Paris Agreement
22 November 2024
The Energy Transition Advancement Index highlights how the Kingdom can ease its oil dependency and catch up with peers Norway and UAE
21 November 2024
E&P company is charting its own course through the transition, with a highly focused natural gas portfolio, early action on its own emissions and the development of a major carbon storage project