Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park

Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park is a solar park spread over a total area of 77 km2 (30 sq mi) in Saih Al-Dahal, about 50 km (31 mi) south of the city of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).[1]

Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park
CountryUnited Arab Emirates
LocationSeih Al-Dahal, Dubai
Coordinates24°45′17″N 55°21′54″E / 24.7547°N 55.365°E / 24.7547; 55.365
Construction began2012
Commission date22 October 2013 (first phase)
OwnerDubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA)
OperatorACWA Power
Solar farm
TypeCombined PV and CSP plant
Site resource2150 kWh/(m2, yr)
Site area77 square kilometres (30 sq mi)
Power generation
Units operational2,860 MWp
Units under const.1,800 MWp
Nameplate capacity
  • 1,313 MW
  • 5 GW
Capacity factor24.6%
Annual net outputappr. ~2800 GWh/yr
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

It is one of the world's largest renewable projects based on an independent power producer (IPP) model. Besides solar farms using PV technology, the project includes concentrating solar power (CSP), with the total capacity of the entire project planned to reach more than 4,000 megawatts. It is estimated that the park will be generating 5,000 megawatts of renewable energy by 2030.

The plant was implemented by the Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA). The first phase of the project was commissioned on 22 October 2013. At the end of 2020 the solar PV complex reached a generating capacity of 1.013 GW with the aim to reach 5GW by 2030. The 4th (700 MW CSP + 250 MW PV, known as Noor Energy 1) and 5th phase (900 MW PV) are under construction.

The 200-megawatt second phase of the project drew global attention as the winning bid of the tender set a new record-low tariff of only US ¢5.89 per kilowatt-hour. This is about 20% lower than any previous, unsubsidized power purchase agreement (PPA) the world has seen before. The PPA is set to a 25-year time frame.

Thanks to a storage capacity of up to 15 hours, the plant can produce power day and night.

History

The solar park was announced by Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum in January 2012.[1]

Phase 1

The first phase of the park was a 13 MWp solar farm (DEWA 13) constructed by First Solar. It was commissioned on 22 October 2013. It uses 152,880 FS-385 black CdTe modules and generates about 28 GWh per year which corresponds to a capacity factor of 24.6%.[1]

Phase 2

The second phase is a 200 MWp photovoltaic plant built at a cost of US$320 million by a consortium led by ACWA Power and Spanish company TSK. The second phase was scheduled to be commissioned by April 2017. It was completed ahead of time, and commissioned on 22 March 2017. TSK served as the primary contractor for the project, while ACWA Power will operate the plant. The phase includes 2.3 million photovoltaic solar panels spread over an area of 4.5 km2. ACWA Power secured a 27-year debt financing loan worth $344 million from the First Gulf Bank, the National Commercial Bank and the Samba Financial Group. The plant uses First Solar's CdTe modules.

The 200 MWp second phase of the project caused worldwide attention, as the winning bid of the tender set a new record-low tariff of only US ¢5.89 per kilowatt-hour. This is about 20% lower than any previous, unsubsidized power purchase agreement (PPA) the world has seen before. The PPA is set to a 25-year time frame. Assuming the same capacity factor as for phase 1 (24.6%) the annual production will be approximately 430 GWh/yr.

Phase 3

In April 2015, Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA) publicly announced the third phase of 800 MWp. A consortium led by Abu Dubai Future Energy Company (Masdar) was awarded the contract for phase three in June 2016. The third phase was completed in 2020.[1]

Phase 4 (Noor Energy 1)

The characteristics of the 4th phase of the solar park changed several times during its conception. Originally, DEWA released a request for the Expression of Interest (EOI) for a 200 MWe CSP project in October 2016 and announced the winning bid at 9.45 US cents/kWh purchase price in June 2017. Three months later in September 2017 the final project was revealed at 700 MWe consisting of 600 MWe parabolic trough and a 100 MWe solar power tower both featuring large molten-salt thermal energy storage, while pointing out the record breaking purchase price of 7.30 US cents/kWh. However, analysts highlight that factors such as very low financing cost and an extraordinary long 35-year PPA contributed to this very low figure. Later in 2018 it was announced that 250 MW of solar PV would be added to the project now named Noor Energy 1.

The solar power tower is the tallest in the world, standing at 260 m (850 ft). The Noor Energy 1 solar complex will have 15 hours of energy storage capacity, and be able to deliver power 24 hours a day. It boasts of being "the largest single-site concentrated solar power plant in the world". It uses the technology known as concentrated solar thermal power, or CSP. Mirrors are used to concentrate the sun's rays, which are then beamed into the tower, which acts as a receptor. The plant is also the largest CSP in the world. It Noor Energy 1 covers 44 km2 (17 sq mi). Apart from the tower, there are three other units, all 200-megawatt parabolic trough CSP units. Together these additional units generate 600 megawatts of electricity in the daytime and continue for 12 hours at night. Noor Energy 1 is able to deliver a gigawatt of power in total.

Noor Energy 1 cost US$3.8 billion to construct, but there are no ongoing fuel costs to consider.

Phase 5

On 21 November 2019, DEWA announced the selection of ACWA Power and Gulf Investment Corporation as preferred EPC and financer respectively, to build and operate the fifth phase, a 900 MW solar power plant based on photovoltaic technology. The plant is scheduled to be commissioned in 2021.[citation needed]

Phase 6

DEWA awarded a contract for the sixth phase with 1,800 MW to Masdar in August 2023 with a bid price of $US16.24/MWh.

Phase by phase project execution table

Phase Capacity Technology Commissioned IPP Cost
First 13 MW photovoltaic 2013
Second 200 MW photovoltaic April 2017 ACWA Power & TSK US$320 million
Third Stage 1: 200 MW
Stage 2: 300 MW
Stage 3: 300 MW
photovoltaic May 2018
2019
2020
Masdar & EDF Group US$945 million
Fourth Stage 1: 600 MW
Stage 2: 100 MW
Stage 3: 217 MW
parabolic trough
solar power tower
photovoltaic
Dec 2023
2021
2021
US$3.8 billion
Fifth Stage 1: 330 MW
Stage 2: 600 MW
photovoltaic August 2021
June 2023
ACWA Power & GIC US$545 million
Sixth 1,800 MW photovoltaic 2024–2026 (expected) Masdar US$1.5 billion
Total 4,660 MW US$7.11 billion

See also

  • Solar power in the United Arab Emirates

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