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The Masdar consortium, which includes GD Power of China and the Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO) was one of two groups shortlisted to be managers of the project, and with the award of this project Masdar will look to expand its presence in Saudi Arabia. The company has already built the 300MW South Jeddah Noor solar project, and has the 1.1GW Al Henakiyah and 250MW AMAALA solar-plus-storage project in its pipeline.

As part of the Al Sadawi announcement, the Saudi Power Procurement Company, a state-owned enterprise, signed a PPA with the Masdar consortium. Masdar has previously collaborated with the Saudi Power Procurement Company, having signed a PPA for the South Jeddah Noor facility, and the Saudi government has now signed agreements for 25 renewable energy projects, with a combined capacity of 23GW.

The deals are Saudi Arabia’s latest investment in the renewable power space, as it looks to reach its ‘Vision 2030’ goal of generating half of its electricity from renewable energy by the end of the decade. This will likely be a tall order for the country, with the International Energy Agency (IEA) reporting that, in 2022, oil and natural gas accounted for 99.4% of the country’s domestic electricity generation.

The Saudi Power Procurement Company also announced a number of PPAs for fossil fuel projects, including the Rumah and Nairyah thermal plants. While these projects could use carbon capture and storage technology, they have a combined capacity of 7.2GW, almost four times as much as the capacity of the Al Sadawi project, raising questions about the government’s ability to meet its 2030 climate goals.

The chairman of Masdar, Sultan Ahmed Al-Jaber, is also the head of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) and the Emirati minister of industry and advanced technology.

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