English: Photovoltaic Micro-plants by Isofoton (Morocco) (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Hailed as
the next green energy leader in the sun-soaked Mediterranean, Morocco has been
taking steps towards reaching a 40 percent renewable mix by 2020, essentially
doubling even Europe’s clean energy goals. However, figuring out just how a
country with little in the way of domestic energy reserves and rather
unsustainable public spending obligations is going to pay for it all has
remained a sticking point for all concerned.
The last
few months have done little to remedy this situation. To the north, the
country’s main trading partners and potential investors continue to struggle
with a seemingly endless economic crisis. Closer to home, government spending
has continued to rise in step with efforts to curb the kind of growing public
protests that led to challenges to the government in Tunisia, Libya and Egypt.
Taken with a nation-wide drought, the situation has left Morocco posting a
modest 2.5 to 3 percent growth rate for the year.
Enter Saudi
Arabia. This week saw an anonymous government source tell Reuters that Morocco
state officials had all but decided that they would team with Saudi Arabia’s
International Company for Water and Power (ACWA) to kick start what amounts to
the first stage of the country’s sprawling solar plan outside the southern town
of Ouarzazate – a 160 MW component of a 6 GW overall renewable strategy planned
over the next eight years. The public-private effort will cost about $500
million and include an agreement with ACWA to handle financing, design,
construction and maintenance of the plant.
The broader
plan, which was initiated in 2009, promises 2 GW from wind power (300 MW are
already installed) and 2GW from a planned 5 solar projects across the country,
amounting to about 18 percent of Morocco’s energy demand, with construction
planned between 2014 and 2020, according to a Saudi Gazette report. The
remaining renewable options will come from hydro and biomass projects.
While an
official government announcement on the project funding and partnership has not
been offered, the reported step forward is welcome news for the country’s green
energy advocates, both at home and those associated with the German-led
Desertec initiative. While the far-reaching Desertec renewable energy project
includes green energy projects from Tunis to Cairo, Morocco has emerged as the
program’s best bet for a successful anchor project thanks to their early
adoption and support for solar and wind efforts.
Still,
there is a long road ahead for the North African nation’s renewable energy
dreams, not least because of recent increases in government spending green
advocates would have rather seen go towards project and infrastructure
development. Over the past year, public program spending from Rabat has
increased in response to growing political protests, with new subsidies and job
efforts aimed at calming potential opposition movements. While early efforts
combined with elections and pledges for constitutional reforms helped ease the
tension, sustaining such spending with minimal natural resource revenue is
becoming an increasingly difficult task to keep up.
Dependent
on exports for much of their energy needs and largely free of domestic oil and
gas resources, Morocco launched their 2009 renewable energy program as a part
of a diversification effort that has included traditional projects and beefing
up the country’s role as an energy transport hub. Looking beyond green options,
Morocco has also stepped up traditional energy license offers as well as
exploring offshore drilling efforts, though there is far less confidence in
that sector’s potential. Earlier this year, Tangiers opened an expanded storage
facility for oil, gas and other refined materials aimed at the more than 70,000
ships that pass through the Strait of Gibraltar each year.
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