Solar Power Desalination Plants Forging Ahead In Dubai

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  • Dubai: The cost of water production is set to be reduced, thanks to the regionโ€™s efforts to integrate renewable energy into water desalination processes.
  • The region is dependent on desalination for its potable water, and has a total water production capacity of 470 million gallons per day (MIGD), but the process is energy-intensive.

The Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA) is planning to power the regionโ€™s desalination plants with solar power, and save approximately $13 billion between now, and 2030, with a capacity target of 305 million gallons per day.

โ€œDubai is pushing for increased efficiency in the production of water. We are already in the final stages of a large scale integration of renewable energy in our water production processes,โ€ said Jamal Shaheen Al Hammadi, vice president of Clean Energy & Diversification Business Development & Excellence at DEWA.

โ€œPhotovoltaic reverse osmosis will now become the new trend as we aim for 100% renewable energy desalination in Dubai. This supports our efforts to boost water production in the emirate.โ€

DEWA received five bids from Cranmore Partners from the UAE and UK; Synergy from India and the USA; Deloitte from the USA; PricewaterhouseCoopers from the UK, and Ernst & Young from the UK.

โ€œDEWA intends to desalinate all its water powered by a mix of clean energy that uses environmentally sustainable energy by 2030. This means Dubai will exceed global targets for usingย clean energy to desalinate water,โ€ said Al Hammadi.

In 2016, Suez, (now ENGIE) launched a pilot 100 cubic meters per day desalination plant inย Ghantoot, Abu Dhabi, as part of the utilityโ€™s drive to incorporate newer technologies.

โ€œThe plant has been successfully tested to run 100% on solar power. This is an important step towards achieving our goals and a major breakthrough in the regionโ€™s desalination,โ€ according to Pierre Pauliac, Middle East chief executive for Suez (ENGIE).

โ€œThere is no longer any doubt we can now run aย desalination plantย on solar power. Our next step now is to take these findings and apply them to industrial scale desalination.

โ€œI am very optimistic that in the next eighteen months we will have solar panels powering large scale desalination plants because we have tried it and it will work.โ€

Dubai expects more than 8% of its total power to be generated from clean energy by 2020.

South Africa also boast its first solar powered desalination plant. Read more

Author: Babalwa Bungane

This article was originally published on ESI Africa and is republished with permission with minor editorial changes. This article was featured on their sister websiteย Smart Energy International.

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