Iraq Accelerates Solar Power Development

  • Iraq, OPEC’s second-largest oil producer, aims to accelerate solar power development with at least 1,000 small projects over the next three years.
  • Currently, solar power accounts for less than 1 per cent of Iraq’s electricity.

Iraq, OPEC’s second-largest oil producer, aims to accelerate solar power development with at least 1,000 small projects over the next three years, a senior government official has said.

“Solar energy will be an essential part of the national energy mix by 2030,” Mazhar Mohammed Salih, advisor to the Iraqi Prime Minister, was quoted as saying by IraqiNews.

Iraq, like the other countries in the sunny Middle East, has huge potential for solar power development.

Iraq is heavily reliant on fossil fuels for its energy and electricity mix and has even had to seek U.S. waivers to continue importing electricity and natural gas from neighbouring Iran, which is under sanctions.

Currently, solar power accounts for less than 1 per cent of Iraq’s electricity. In Iraq, the share of clean electricity was just 1.2 per cent in 2023, according to energy think tank Ember.

The largest source of clean electricity was hydropower, with 0.9 per cent of total electricity, while the share of wind and solar, at 0.3 per cent, was far below the global average of 13 per cent in 2023.

Recently announced projects are set to boost solar energy in one of the world’s top oil producers and exporters.

Earlier this month, Iraq’s Electricity Minister, Ziyad Ali Fadel, held a meeting with UAE-based renewable energy giant Masdar to accelerate the installation of solar projects with a combined 1,000 megawatts (MW) of capacity.

UAE’s Masdar, for its part, wants to become one of the world’s biggest renewable companies, targeting 100 gigawatts (GW) of solar and wind assets by 2030.

Masdar sees having up to a 35 per cent market share of the renewables power capacity in the Middle East by the end of the decade, 20 per cent of Europe’s clean energy capacity, and up to 25 per cent of the U.S. capacity, CEO Mohamed Jameel Al Ramahi told the Financial Times at the end of last year.

The company’s shareholders are Abu Dhabi’s oil giant ADNOC, Abu Dhabi’s sovereign investment company Mubadala, and state utility giant TAQA.

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