Did you know, despite its limited natural water resources, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has one of the highest water consumption rates per capita in the world?
As a thriving economy in the Middle East, the UAE’s fast-paced urbanization and population growth has fueled an unprecedented demand for sustainable and cost-efficient portable water generation – a challenge to which technology and financing may offer some fresh thinking.
Energy as part of the water equation
Most of the potable water across the Emirates comes from desalinated seawater. This underpins the critical role of desalination plants in safeguarding water supply – a key United Nations Sustainable Development Goal that is even more relevant to the country in times of climate change.
Currently, the World Resources Institute ranks the UAE at 10th out of 164 in a global league of countries where water supplies are most stretched . Alleviating this resource stress would require not only new water generation infrastructure, but also a considerable volume of energy needed to power them.
Forward-looking technologies therefore sit at the core of the region’s long-term water strategy: desalination facilities that can increase water production – while being more energy-efficient and environmental-friendly at the same time.
Financing the world’s largest reverse osmosis desalination plant
In Abu Dhabi, modern technology and project financing are instrumental to make real what is soon to be the world’s largest desalination plant using seawater reverse osmosis technology – a water purification process that is less energy-intensive than traditional thermal desalination operations.
The Taweelah desalination plant, will supply 909,200 cubic meters per day (m3/day) of water, 44% more than the world’s current largest reverse osmosis plant of 624,000 (m3/day), meeting the water needs of 350,000 households.
Setting new benchmarks for its size and cost-efficiency, Taweelah is a light-house project enabled in a public-private partnership (PPP). The tender to build, own and operate the facility for 30 years was won by ACWA Power, the Saudi-based developer, investor and operator of power generation and desalinated water plants.
While Siemens contributes as a sub-supplier of digital industry and smart infrastructure technologies, the majority of the financing behind the $869-million project was enabled by senior project finance loans from a club of six lenders, in which Siemens Bank, the banking subsidiary of Siemens Financial Services (SFS), took a significant share and acted as the Mandated Lead Arranger (MLA).
As in many cases around the world, Siemens helps realize large-scale infrastructure by providing technology and financing from the same source. “The SFS participation in the debt finance motivated ACWA Power to facilitate an early and close engagement between the EPC Joint Venture partners and Siemens,” Marcus Oates, Head of Vertical Sales of Digital Industry, Process Automation, Siemens UAE, comments.
Accelerating water transition in the Middle East
As the first desalination plant to be built independent of a power plant in Abu Dhabi , Taweelah will help support the UAE’s vision in lowering carbon dioxide emissions, while reducing gas consumption by decoupling power and water production for the winter and summer seasons.
海水淡化基础设施对于整个中东地区的长期可持续发展至关重要,但这类项目同样属于资本密集型投资。对于 Taweelah 项目,Siemens Financial Services (SFS) 很荣幸能够借助 Siemens 技术推动这一先进项目落地。将定制化项目融资与技术作为整体解决方案一并提供,是市场上独具特色的组合,也是推动关键基础设施建设的重要支撑。
Looking into the future, the combined effects of population and prosperity are projected to triple the water demand in the Middle East in the next few decades . To sustainably cope with such needs, the impact of smart technology, and the financing solutions tailored to invest in them early, will remain essential for the rapidly developing region.
