The United Arab Emirates and the United States signed a partnership agreement to invest $100 billion in clean energy projects with a production capacity of 100 gigawatts by 2035, state news agency WAM reported.
President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan has witnessed the signing of a strategic partnership between the UAE and the US to accelerate the energy transition, advance shared climate goals and strengthen global energy security.
UAE Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and Special Envoy for Climate Change Dr. Sultan Al Jaber and Special Presidential Coordinator Amos Hochstein signed the Partnership on behalf of the UAE and the US.
The signing ceremony took place at ADIPEC, a global platform that brings together leaders and pioneers of the global energy sector to discuss energy security and ensure adequate and sustainable supply of energy at appropriate costs.
The UAE-US Partnership for Accelerating Clean Energy (PACE), which will catalyse US$100 billion in financing and other support in addition to deploying 100 new gigawatts (GW) of clean energy in the US, UAE and emerging economies around the world by 2035.
Looking ahead to COP27 in Egypt next month and to COP28 in the UAE next year, both countries will work together to advance their shared view that the fastest and most reliable pathway to achieve net zero will require accelerating investment in clean energy technology and resources.
The UAE, a global leader in the energy transition, has invested more than $50 billion over the past ten years in clean energy technologies and solutions around the world, building three of the largest and lowest-cost solar projects in the world.
With three reactors online, the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant will ultimately supply up to 25 percent of the country’s electricity needs from a carbon-free source.
Other notable UAE projects include the 5,000-MW Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park and the region’s first industrial-scale carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) facility, which captures 800,000 tons of carbon dioxide with plans to expand six-fold by 2030.
The UAE also is supporting and implementing clean energy projects on six continents, including in 31 small island-developing states in both the Caribbean and the Pacific Ocean. In the US, the UAE has backed eight clean energy projects totaling 1.6 GW across California, Texas, New Mexico and Nebraska.
These include investments in the 149-megawatt (MW) Rocksprings wind farm in Val Verde County, TX and the 29.9-MW Sterling wind farm in Lea County, NM. In Europe, the UAE has helped to develop the 630-MW London Array wind farm in the United Kingdom and the first-of-its-kind 30-MW Hywind Scotland floating wind farm.
The UAE also is home to the headquarters of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) and will host COP28 UAE, the Emirates Climate Conference in November 2023 at Expo City in Dubai.