- Metacon has announced its entry into Morocco’s renewable energy landscape, signing a 1.82 million euro deal.
- Metacon emphasised that Morocco, with its abundant solar and wind resources, is poised to become a hub in the emerging North African hydrogen market.
Swedish energy firm Metacon has announced its entry into Morocco’s renewable energy landscape, signing a 1.82 million euro deal to supply a 1 MW pressurised alkaline electrolyser.
The system will be installed off-grid and connected directly to wind turbines owned by one of Morocco’s leading renewable energy companies, marking a tentative but symbolic move toward green hydrogen production.
Delivered as a ready-to-operate container unit, the pilot project aims to test and refine the integration of hydrogen systems with wind energy, seen as a precursor to Morocco’s larger ambitions around green ammonia, e-fuels, and hydrogen exports.
Metacon emphasised that Morocco, with its abundant solar and wind resources, is poised to become a hub in the emerging North African hydrogen market.
However, energy analyst Amine Bennouna stressed that producing 1 MW of hydrogen is far from meeting national needs, “Just one million tons of green ammonia for OCP requires 200,000 tons of hydrogen, meaning up to 3 GW of capacity.”
At current costs of $7 per kilogram of hydrogen, the economics remain out of reach. “Unless we get that cost down to $1, this isn’t viable at scale,” he said.
Ali Charroud, a researcher in climate and energy policy, sees the high cost as the price of innovation, “What’s expensive here is not the raw materials, it’s the embedded research and proprietary know-how.”
He added that Morocco, lacking domestic R&D in hydrogen, must rely on global partnerships to catch up.
The project may be small in capacity, but its implications are vast. It reflects Morocco’s strategy of cautious experimentation, allowing foreign expertise to test technology locally as it gradually positions itself for a future defined by decarbonization, and by energy independence written not in oil, but in wind and water.