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28 March 2024

UAE is well placed to take lead in renewable energy storage

Published
By WAM

Global energy markets have been in flux for the past decade.

Prices of solar and wind power are at record lows, natural gas is trading well below its historical average and oil prices are a fraction of where they were just a few years ago.

Today’s low-cost environment is opening up new options for electricity generation, just as energy storage technology is coming of age.

Large companies are already investing heavily in energy storage batteries to meet growing demand for reinforcement of renewable energy supplies, in developed and emerging markets.

Energy storage is also a growing area of focus for entrepreneurs, including in this region, according to an article published by English language local daily, TheNational.

The UAE has been at the forefront of global energy markets with its successful renewable energy auctions, and is now in an excellent position to also take a leadership role in energy storage, a young market with great potential.

Supporting this technology would benefit the country and region, and also send a clear signal to the world of where we are headed next.

At the World Economic Forum’s regional meeting in Jordan from May 19-21, we will hear from a number of small businesses who are at the crest of this critical market change.

For example, Energy24, based in Lebanon, has developed technology that can store and manage electrical power that provides 60 per cent savings over conventional generators, without the noise, pollution or carbon emissions.

In Morocco, eLum has developed software that uses artificial intelligence to manage on-grid and off-grid energy costs for large industry.

For governments across Mena, including the UAE, the emergence of an energy storage market opens up a new set of decisions about how best to generate and distribute electricity.

Critically, it offers the chance to lock in low-cost, emissions-free renewable energy for domestic consumption while reserving oil and natural gas for export.

Several Mena countries have already begun exploring energy storage as a way to integrate new renewable generation resources and improve the stability and reliability of national grids.

The outcome of a recent solar photovoltaic tender in Jordan that included battery storage indicates that dependable electricity supply using solar power can be achieved at extremely cost-competitive pricing compared to fossil fuels.

While energy storage technology remains young, the market is poised for dramatic expansion.

Battery storage deployment in emerging markets could grow 40-fold in the coming decade as more countries bet on its value as a solar and wind back-up, according to research commissioned this year by my institution, the International Finance Corporation, as well as the World Bank’s Energy Sector Management Assistance Programme and the US department of energy.

Philippe Le Houerou is the CEO of International Finance Corporation, the private sector arm of the World Bank Group.