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Qatar's Solar Energy Projects: Green Energy in Heart of Desert

Economy

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Doha, July 28 (QNA) - Amid the numerous global challenges related to climate change, exploring new sources of clean and enduring energy is the holy grail of all nations.

In this direction, the State of Qatar has pursued an ambitious strategy in the path toward new and renewable energies, mostly solar energy as an easy-to-access natural source.

The nation has embarked on carrying out behemoth projects, thereby reflecting its national orientation toward a green economy to reduce reliance on biofuel, an approach that reflects concrete steps toward achieving the environmental and energy objectives of the Qatar National Vision 2030.

Qatar had set targets under the Second National Development Strategy (2018-2022) and the National Environment and Climate Change Strategy (2021-2030), including producing 20 percent of electricity from renewable sources by 2030, slashing greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent, and investing in solar energy storage research and grid integration projects.

One of Qatar’s flagship renewable energy projects is the Al Kharsaah solar power plant west of Doha. With a production capacity of 800 megawatts across 10 square kilometers and equipped with more than 1.8 million solar panels, the plant supplies electricity to roughly 60,000 homes.

It literally covers up to 10 percent of the nation's electricity needs at peak times and delivers power at a highly competitive rate. The project is a major step in cutting carbon emissions, with a projected reduction of 26 million tons of COâ‚‚.

Having been commissioned last April, the Ras Laffan and Mesaieed solar power plants entered the production phase, adding a combined electricity genration capacity of 875 megawatts, following the inauguration of the 800-megawatt Al Kharsaah plant in 2022.

آ  This move unequivocally underscores the scale of Qatar's economic transformation and its uncompromising environmental commitment, with the strategic investments now bringing the country’s total solar output to 1,675 megawatts, covering nearly 15 percent of peak electricity demand and preventing around 4.7 million tonnes of carbon emissions annually.

This forward momentum bolsters Qatar's global standing, as it continues to push forward with mammoth projects, adopt supportive policies, and leverage cutting-edge innovations in renewable energy, thereby putting the nation firmly on track to meet its ambitious sustainability and economic diversification goals.

Overall, the data underscores that the Ras Laffan and Mesaieed solar power plants have collectively boosted Qatar’s total solar power generation capacity to 1,675 megawatts of renewable electricity, a critical inflection point in advancing the fourth pillar of the Qatar National Vision 2030, which calls for environmental stewardship that ensures synergy between economic growth, social development, and ecological preservation.

This strategic expansion not only fosters Qatar’s standing in the clean energy field but also propels the nation closer to one of the core targets outlined in the QatarEnergy Sustainability Strategy: generating over 4,000 megawatts of renewable energy by the year 2030.

Qatar's leaning on national cadres with respect to everything related to the utility of solar energy as a clean source for production has been striking, with HE Minister of State for Energy Affairs, Deputy Chairman, President, and CEO of QatarEnergy, Eng. Saad Sherida Al Kaabi, emphasizing that QatarEnergy has gone far beyond the stage of capitalizing on external expertise in building, operating, and maintaining solar power plants.

آ  QatarEnergy began implementing these projects with its national expertise, something that it takes pride in along with its achievements. To reaffirm the firm's commitment to relying on new energies, the State of Qatar has prioritized its investments in solar electricity generation, increasing the total value of its projects in this sector from QAR 1.7 billion in the first phase to nearly QAR 4 billion, injecting QAR 2.3 billion into the Mesaieed and Ras Laffan plants in 2022, HE Al Kaabi said during the inauguration of Ras Laffan and Mesaieed solar power plants last April.

This accomplishment, he said, reflects the orientation of the governmental policies and plans toward diversifying energy sources through encouraging investment in renewable energy, given the climate data, as well as material and technological potential in Qatar.

The utility of solar energy has numerous problems that inhibit the use of this source on a large scale, including the high cost of primary construction, as production is inherently weaker during nighttime usage, and given that installing solar panels demands vast expanses of space.

With this fact factored in, any ambition to scale generation capacity inevitably entails deploying significantly larger arrays of solar panels to meet the increased electricity demand. (MORE)

Economy

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