Bids of US$0.0162/kWh emerge as Saudi Arabia shortlists firms for 1.47GW solar tender

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Email
The round-two tendering of 1.47GW of solar comes after round one delivered the 300MW Sakaka project. Image credit: Huawei

Some of the world’s top green energy players have tabled ultra-low bids under the second round of Saudi Arabia’s renewable energy programme, set to contract a 1.47GW all in all.

The kingdom's Renewable Energy Project Development Office (REPDO) recently identified the firms and consortia shortlisted to develop a slew of solar projects across the country, with some proposing tariffs below the 2-US-dollar-cent-per-kWh threshold.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Unlock unlimited access for 12 whole months of distinctive global analysis

Photovoltaics International is now included.

  • Regular insight and analysis of the industry’s biggest developments
  • In-depth interviews with the industry’s leading figures
  • Unlimited digital access to the PV Tech Power journal catalogue
  • Unlimited digital access to the Photovoltaics International journal catalogue
  • Access to more than 1,000 technical papers
  • Discounts on Solar Media’s portfolio of events, in-person and virtual

Or continue reading this article for free

At 600MW in planned capacity, the Al-Faisaliah PV project is the largest of the lot and will be either contracted to a consortium led by Saudi player ACWA Power, or a rival partnership led by United Arab Emirates-headquartered firm Masdar.

According to REPDO, the bids for Al-Faisaliah from either side were “extremely close”. The gap between the figures for levelized costs of electricity (LCOE) each had produced was, the government agency said, “within statistical margin of error”.

REPDO’s next step for the 600MW project will be to have the two consortia compete under a ‘best and final offer’ approach. The tendering results for this particular project will be revealed at some point in April 2020, the Office added.

The agency did shed light on the tariffs proposed for every other project under the round-two tender. From ACWA to First Solar, Marubeni and others, the shortlisted bidders (see table below) proposed a wide range of prices for PV schemes in the 20MW-300MW spectrum.

Shortlisted solar tariffs under Saudi Arabia’s NREP (round two)

Project name (capacity) Jeddah PV IPP (300 MW) Rabigh PV IPP (300 MW) Qurrayat PV IPP (200 MW) Madinah PV IPP (50 MW) Rafha PV IPP (20 MW)
Shortlisted bidder #1 (tariff offered in US$) Masdar-led consortium (US$0.0162/kWh) Marubeni-led consortium (US$0.017/kWh) ACWA-led consortium (US$0.0178/kWh) Al Blagha-led consortium (US$0.019/kWh) Al Blagha-led consortium (US$0.0348/kWh)
Shortlisted bidder #2 (tariff offered in US$) ACWA-led consortium (US$0.0165/kWh) ACWA-led consortium (US$0.0175/kWh) Total Solar-led consortium (US$0.018/kWh) First Solar-led consortium (US$0.0302/kWh) First Solar-led consortium (US$0.05/kWh)
Source: REPDO

PV rounds of 1.47GW and 1.2GW for oil-reliant kingdom

Held under the so-called National Renewable Energy Program (NREP), Saudi Arabia’s tenders are part of a plan to drive a renewable boom in the space of a decade. Previously floated targets would have the country reach major volumes of installed solar (40GW) and wind and others (20GW) by 2030.

The country – which relies on oil revenues to prop up national budgets – has recently seen sharp declines in reference barrel prices, as lockdown plans enacted due to the COVID-19 crisis forced downwards revisions of demand for the fossil fuel.

Analysts believe however that solar growth will be forthcoming, amid predictions the country will be one of a few global “growth engines” – installing 1-GW of PV every year – by 2024. NREP’s round-one already delivered the 300MW Sakaka PV plant, while round-three is set to unlock a further 1.2GW.

Winners of the NREP scheme will be rewarded with a 25-year PPA, featuring the Saudi Power Procurement Company (SPPC) as offtaker. In return, their solar installations will have to comply with a minimum 17% share of local content, as defined under Saudi law.

The solar bids of US$0.0162/kWh now being touted in Saudi Arabia mirror the tariffs of US$0.016953/kWh scored last October by a 900MW project in Dubai. The Middle Eastern solar milestones emerge after similar numbers were reported for PV tenders in Brazil and Portugal.

The Middle East has become a sought-after target among Asian solar makers, keen to supply an area seen as lacking domestic manufacturing firepower. From Huawei to Jolywood, Chinese players recently walked PV Tech (see links ahead for part one and two) through their moves in the region.

Read Next

January 20, 2025
Masdar has selected Jinko Solar and JA Solar to supply modules for its 5.2GW solar PV and 19GWh battery storage project in Abu Dhabi.
January 20, 2025
Round-up of news from China with Saudi Arabian power developer ACWA Power partnering with two Chinese companies, state-owned China Energy Engineering wins bid to develop a floating solar (FPV) project in the Philippines and Guodian Power invests in 2GW Saudi PV project.
January 17, 2025
Emirati state-owned renewable energy project developer Masdar has entered the Philippines market with plans to develop 1GW of solar PV, wind and battery energy storage systems (BESS).
Premium
January 13, 2025
The Middle East has become a key market for Chinese PV companies, both as a source of demand for hardware and also as a hotspot for new manufacturing hubs. Carrie Xiao reports on some of the latest developments in the region.
January 6, 2025
Chinese PV tracker provider Arctech has secured a 1.5GW solar tracker supply agreement with Chinese state-owned energy company PowerChina.
December 5, 2024
TotalEnergies has sold a 50% stake in a 2GW US solar and energy storage portfolio and acquired German renewable energy developer VSB Group.

Subscribe to Newsletter

Upcoming Events

Solar Media Events
February 19, 2025
Tokyo, Japan
Solar Media Events
March 11, 2025
Frankfurt, Germany
Solar Media Events
March 18, 2025
Sydney, Australia