Search

Hydrogen

Thursday
28 Jan 2021

Saudi Arabia Seeks European Partners to Develop Hydrogen

28 Jan 2021  by Jennifer Gnana   

Saudi Arabia is looking to partner with European firms to develop blue and green hydrogen, as the kingdom, the world's largest oil exporter, presses ahead with plans to generate 50 per cent of power from renewables.

Delegates walk during the fourth edition of the FII conference at Riyadh's Ritz-Carlton. Saudi Arabia plans to divert barrels being used in meeting the need for electricity and looks to increasingly programme its power stations to run on gas. AFP.

Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, the kingdom's energy minister, said the country had ambitions of becoming "another Germany" when it comes to renewables.

"We're working with so many countries on green hydrogen and blue hydrogen and ... I could say that we will be pioneering more of that blue hydrogen and green hydrogen," Prince Abdulaziz told the Future Investment Initiative on Wednesday. The annual event, is being held in Saudi Arabia's capital city, Riyadh, with a limited capacity due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The minister's comments follow ambitious plans laid out by his ministry to assess the potential of becoming an exporter for the clean gas.

Hydrogen has become a popular alternative fuel among Gulf oil producers looking to diversify their energy sources. Blue hydrogen is derived from gas, while the green variant is produced from renewable sources.

Saudi Arabia's plans to diversify its economy away from reliance on hydrocarbons will begin with its utility sector, the minister said.

"We would be converting 50 per cent of our power sector's fuel into gas, and the rest will be coming from renewables," he told an online audience.

"In tandem with that, we will be saving thousands and hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil that are going to waste, that we could export," he added.

The country will be "progressively" moving with its efficiency programme and price reforms, he added.

Saudi Arabia has launched a renewables programme and is constructing its first solar and wind power plants. The Gulf country also plans to develop atomic power for civilian use.

Prince Abdulaziz reiterated Saudi Arabia's commitments to the Paris Agreement, which pushes signatory countries to reach carbon neutrality by 2050, as an effective deterrent to peaking global greenhouse gas emissions.

"We [as] Saudi Arabia [are] a staunch believer of [the] Paris Agreement. And we will do everything as a government to enable our government companies to achieve their targets," he said.

The agreement will bring "lots of economic growth, and lots of diversity", he added.

This article is reproduced at www.thenationalnews.com

More News

Loading……