Algeria set to open solar panel factory


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Algeria Solar Power Investment accelerates renewable energy with Sonelgaz building a Sahara photovoltaic plant, 50 MW capacity, manufacturing solar cells for the grid and export to Europe, amid Desertec plans and Morocco's 2,000 MW project.

 

What's Happening

Sonelgaz will build PV manufacturing and a 50 MW Sahara plant to supply Algeria's grid and enable exports to Europe.

  • Sonelgaz to invest $100 million in Sahara PV plant.
  • Factory to produce 50 MW of photovoltaic cells yearly.
  • Contractor tender expected before year-end, per APS.

 

Oil and gas producer Algeria is to build a plant to manufacture solar panels as part of a plan to draw 5 percent of its electricity from renewable energy by 2015, state media reported.

 

Most of Algeria lies in the Sahara desert, a region that has attracted interest from major European companies that want to tap into its huge Sahara solar power potential and its proximity to energy-hungry markets in Europe.

Algeria's state-owned utility Sonelgaz will invest $100 million in the plant and will launch a bidding round for contractors by the end of this year, Algeria's official APS news agency quoted Sonelgaz CEO Noureddine Bouterfa as saying, while Cevital looks to enter the solar market as well.

The agency said the factory, which is scheduled to open in 2012, will each year produce photovoltaic cells with a generating capacity of 50 megawatts, equivalent to about one tenth the capacity of a small nuclear power plant.

A consortium of 12 companies including Siemens, E.ON and Deutsche Bank is planning a 400 billion euro (US$597.3 billion) project, known as Desertec, to generate Sahara solar power for Europe in North Africa and export it to Europe.

Algerian Energy and Mines Minister Chakib Khelil has expressed reservations about the project, saying earlier this year: "We don't want foreign companies exploiting solar energy from our land."

Neighboring Morocco this month announced a $9 billion solar power initiative project of its own which is slated to produce 2,000 megawatts of electricity by 2020. Officials though have released few details of how the 2,000-MW solar project will be funded.

 

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