Saudi’s ACWA to build 2 solar plants with total capacity of 1.4GW in Uzbekistan

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By Arya M Nair, Official Reporter
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ACWA Power, a leading Saudi developer, investor, and operator of power generation, water desalination and green hydrogen plants worldwide, has revealed its plan to build two solar plants in Uzbekistan with a total capacity of 1.4 gigawatts and three power storage systems with a combined capacity of 1.2 gigawatts.

The two parties have signed investment agreements on the project worth $2.5 billion and deals under which Uzbekistan will buy power from the facilities, Uzbekistan’s Energy Ministry said in a statement.

Under the deal signed by two parties, ACWA will construct a 400-megawatt plant and a storage facility with the same capacity in Tashkent province, a 1-gigawatt plant and a 400-megawatt storage system in the Samarkand region, and 400 megawatts of storage in Bukhara province.

Uzbekistan faces natural gas shortages for its traditional gas turbine plants due to natural production declines at maturing fields. It has in recent years signed deals for a number of renewable energy projects, attracting investors, many of them from the Gulf, with lucrative contracts that include features such as prices fixed in hard currency. The former Soviet republic plans to produce more than a third of its energy from renewable sources by 2030.

Recently, ACWA Power entered into a ground-breaking partnership agreement with the Republic of Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Energy and Samruk-Kazyna, the sovereign wealth fund of Kazakhstan, to lead and develop a 1GW wind energy and battery storage project within the Central Asian country with an initial investment of $1.5 billion.

Related: Tawazun Industrial Park signs 4.4 MW solar lease with Yellow Door Energy

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