Google - AFP, Ali Khalil, March 17, 2013
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A general
view of the newly opened solar power plant, Shams 1, during its
official
inauguration at Madinat Zayed in Abu Dhabi March 17, 2013.
REUTERS/Ben Job
|
MADINAT
ZAYED, United Arab Emirates — Oil-rich Abu Dhabi on Sunday 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.
The
100-megawatt Shams 1 is "the world's largest concentrated solar power
plant in operation" said Sultan al-Jaber, the head of Abu Dhabi's Masdar,
which oversees the emirate's plan to generate seven percent of its energy needs
from renewable sources by 2020.
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Sultan
Ahmed al-Jaber -- the chief
executive of Masdar -- talks to the
press in Abu
Dhabi, on June 9, 2010
(AFP/File)
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"Today,
Shams 1 is the largest CSP plant in all terms," said Santiago Seage, chief
executive officer of Abengoa Solar, one of the partners in the project.
CSP uses a
system of mirrors or lenses, whereas many other solar plants around the world
use photovoltaic technology to harness solar power.
Masdar now
produces 10 percent of the world's concentrated solar power, Seage said during
the official inauguration. The company's energy portfolio represents 68 percent
of renewable energy produced in the Gulf region, where clean energy remains at
an infancy stage.
The solar
park features long lines of parabolic mirrors spread over an area equivalent to
285 football pitches in the desert of the Western Region, some 120 kilometres
(75 miles) southwest of Abu Dhabi.
The 192
rows of loops collect heat that drives turbines to generate power that would
save 175,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide every year, equivalent to taking 15,000
cars off the road.
Automatic
trucks are deployed to dust the mirrors in this desert location where sand
poses a serious challenge to the efficiency of heat collectors. Masdar owns 60
percent of the project, while France's Total and Spain's Abengoa Solar own 20
percent each.
Abu Dhabi
is the wealthiest of the seven sheikhdoms that make up the federation of the
United Arab Emirates.
It sits on
proven oil reserves totalling 98.2 billion barrels -- 95 percent of the UAE's
reserves, which are the world's seventh largest. It also has a large wealth of
gas.
The UAE's
leaders were on site for the ceremonial opening, led by President Sheikh
Khalifa bin Zayad Al-Nahayan and his vice president, Prime Minister and ruler
of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum.
"The
UAE today is the first in the Middle East and OPEC (oil exporting organisation)
to begin producing renewable energy, in addition to having hydrocarbon
exports," said Jaber.
Total's
head of New Energies, Phillipe Boisseau, said the Shams venture is a natural
outcome of the established relation with Abu Dhabi in the energy sector.
"We
share the vision of the need to diversify energy sources," he said.
Abu Dhabi
has vied over the past years to establish a name as a centre for renewable
energy, starting with forming Masdar and then becoming the host of the
newly-formed IRENA renewable energy organisation.
"This
is an extraordinary moment for us," said IRENA's chief Adnan Amin
following the inauguration.
He said
Shams 1 is the "first massive step" towards having the oil-rich
Middle East becoming also a centre for renewable energy.
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The world's
largest concentrated solar power plant, Shams 1,
launched on Sunday, representing
a major milestone
in the development of renewable energy in the Middle East.
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