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Masdar reaches financial close on Baltic Eagle acquisition

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

TODAY: Masdar reaches financial close on Baltic Eagle acquisition

Good morning, nice people. It’s a busy morning on the regional climate industry landscape with lots to dive into from green finance updates to key M&A moves and a sprinkling of solar energy developments from Algeria. Shall we?

BEFORE WE DIVE IN- Don’t miss Enterprise UAE’s chat with Steve Lutes, vice president of Middle East affairs at the US Chamber of Commerce this morning. Lutes covered a lot of ground including the UAE’s potential, especially in the energy transition and energy security sectors, in terms of investment and trade in a post-COP28 era.

HAPPENING TODAY-

TheS&P Global’s CERAWeek is kicking off across the pond in Houston, Texas today and will run through to Friday. Expect an appearance from Adnoc CEO, Industry and Advanced Technology Minister, and UAE Special Envoy for Climate Change Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber along with the chiefs of ExxonMobil and BP and the who’s who of senior US and international policymakers, global energy and services executives, leaders of national oil companies.

Why is this important to us? This year’s big themes include the outlook for energy markets, policy and geopolitics, net-zero supply chains, the green transition in power markets, paying for the transition to greener energy, and climate and sustainability. Check out the full agenda here and the live stream here.

COP WATCH-

COP29 host Azerbaijan plans to increase its current emissions reduction target but will miss the net zero by 2050 benchmark, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing comments made by COP29’s incoming president Mukhtar Babayev to The Financial Times in an interview. The oil and gas producer has set its target to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to 35% by 2030 and 40% by 2050 compared to its 1990 levels — far from the global net zero by 2050 standard. Babayev’s comment comes after head of the UN’s climate arm Simon Stiell urged countries to strengthen their emissions reduction targets and increase climate finance commitments.

“Every COP from now on is a finance COP,” COP26 high-level champion Nigel Topping told The Financial Times Climate Capital Live audience on Thursday. Despite criticism about business leaders joining the talks, the consensus amongst experts is that COP29 will have to prioritize funding as a means to address climate change, Marshall Islands climate envoy Tina Stege told the audience, adding that there is no other way for developing country to realistically meet their nationally determined contributions (NDCs). “NDCs are nice, but you can’t invest in an NDC,” Topping reiterated.

WATCH THIS SPACE-

#1- One step closer to IMEC: India’s cabinet has approved an Inter-Governmental Framework Agreement (IGFA) inked with the UAE in February to enable the India-Middle East Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) — a planned trade route described as the “green and digital bridge across continents and civilisations,” Wam reported last week. “The IGFA includes areas of cooperation between the two countries with the objective of exploring further potential of future joint investment and collaboration in respect of development of the IMEC,” India’s cabinet said in a statement following its approval. The US-led IMEC initiative was unveiled at the G20 talks in New Delhi in September by signatories including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, the EU, India, and the US, as part of the latter’s plan to counter China’s Belt and Road project.

Lots of gains for the global green sector: The corridor — which will include railway and subsea pipeline infrastructure — will facilitate trade of green fuels and renewable energy to and from the GCC with an east corridor connecting India to the GCC and a northern corridor linking the Gulf with Europe. The participating countries will also lay cables for power and data lines along the railway route, as well as pipelines for moving clean hydrogen. France appointed former CEO of Engie Gérard Mestrallet — who was commissioned by France’s Ecology, Sustainable Development Ministry to chair an advisory committee on the EU’s carbon pricing market — as the country’s special envoy last month.

#2- Morocco anticipates a 5% GDP increase and the creation of 400k new jobs as a result of the newly launched Morocco Offer, a six-stage framework geared towards attracting green hydrogen investments to the kingdom, Morocco World News reported last week, citing comments by Morocco’s Minister of Energy Transition Leila Benali. The nation’s head of government Aziz Akhannouch has expressed optimism about the updated energy policy which could bring in some USD 10 bn in investments.

REFRESHER- About the Moroccan Offer: The framework aims to guide investors on how to fund a range of projects in the green energy sector including renewables, green hydrogen and ammonia, and green fuels such as green methanol and synthetic fuels, both for local use and export purposes. The framework outlines the necessary procedures for the application process, land allocation procedures, infrastructure details and requirements as well as the incentives available for investors, the selection process and contractual obligations, and governance details for the green hydrogen sector.

#3- Iran is set to construct two nuclear plants within seven years, Tehran Times reported last week, citing comments by Mohammad Eslami, the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization (AEOI). Neither the size of the plants nor their cost have been revealed.

Iran is going all in on nuclear power: The nation broke ground on four nuclear power plants in the southern part of the country with a combined capacity of 5 GW last month. The plants, located in the east coast port town of Sirik, are expected to cost about USD 20 bn and will require 35 tons of nuclear fuel annually. The AEOI also kicked off construction on the second reactor of its EUR 1.8 bn Bushehr nuclear power plant in October.

#4- Shell decides to water down its emissions goals: Despite maintaining its net-zero by 2050 target,Dutch fossil fuel giant Shell is now aiming to reduce its scope 3 emissions — indirect emissions from the use of its products up and down the value chain representing 70% of a company’s carbon footprint — by 15-20% by the end of the decade, down from the previous 20%, according to the Shell Energy Transition Strategy 2024 (pdf) published on Thursday. The company also dropped its goal of a 45% reduction by 2035 citing “uncertainty in the pace of change in the energy transition.” The targets are measured against Shell’s baseline of emissions in 2016, the report says.

We knew this was coming: The strategy — which is updated every three years — was predicted to see the company allocate a greater portion of investments into oil and gas in order to give better returns to shareholders, a move which CEO Wael Sawan has been championing since he assumed the position early last year. Shell is following in British oil giant BP’s footsteps, which walked away from its target to reduce emissions by 35% by 2030 last year, and said it would pump more oil and gas and produce more CO2 emissions this decade than previously planned.

And it’s raising concerns: The strategy update has sparked concern among climate activists due to a significant 20-year gap in its net-zero emissions road map, Bloomberg wrote. Activists and shareholder groups are now questioning the feasibility of Shell’s long-term environmental strategy, emphasizing the need for clearer interim targets to ensure a sustainable and responsible energy transition. “For investors, not having that clarity of what that pathway looks like now from 2030 to 2050 should be raising quite a lot of concerns,” said the Australasian Centre for Corporate Responsibility strategy lead Nick Spooner

#5- IEA raises predicted oil demand for the fourth time: The International Energy Agency (IEA) has increased its forecast for 2024 oil demand growth up to 1.3 mn barrels per day (bpd) — up from 1.22 mn bpd — a few days after oil producing organization OPEC predicted a much higher growth in oil demand in the same period, Reuters reported on Friday. IEA cited disruptions to Red Sea shipping due to Houthi attacks as the reason for its adjustment, which still remains less optimistic than the world’s biggest oil producing organization OPEC, who kept its 2024 demand growth forecast at 2.25 mn bpd. The gap now stands at almost 1 mn bpd, equivalent to 1% of world demand.

REMEMBER- The gap between OPEC and IEA’s projected yearly oil demand are the largest on record:IEA predicted that demand will rise by 1.22 mn bpd in 2024, while in OPEC’s report they expected oil demand to increase by 2.25 mn bpd in the same period marking the biggest gap in forecasts between the two groups in the 16 years they have been publishing monthly reports.

#6- New EU rules on plastic packaging could penalize poorer countries exporting to the EU, increase the risk of legal challenges, and lead to trade retaliation, Bloomberg reported on Thursday, citing an emailed statement from EU’s trade chief Valdis Dombrovskis. While the rules — pending approval from the parliament and council — aim to reduce packaging waste and promote the use of recycled plastic, the need for careful consideration and proper impact assessment of such significant changes, Dombrovskis added.

REMEMBER- A provisional agreement for a new law banning single-use plastic and reducing packaging waste was reached earlier this month. The agreement will see packaging phased out with reduction targets set at 5% by 2030, 10% by 2035, and 15% by 2040. It will also mandate that nations in the bloc cut plastic packaging specifically. Packaging has become an escalating source of waste in the EU, increasing from 66 mn tons in 2009 to 84 mn tons in 2021.

DANGER ZONE-

#1- There are more chemicals in plastics than we previously thought: There are at least 3k more chemicals in plastics (used for everything from food packaging to toys) than previous studies estimated, according to a new report (pdf) by the Norwegian Research Council project PlastChem. The new research identified over 16k chemicals, a quarter of which are believed to be hazardous, compared to the 13k found in a report (pdf) by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

Chemicals in plastic pose a serious health risk: “We’re finding hundreds if not thousands of plastic chemicals in people now and some of them have been linked to adverse health outcomes,” co-author of the report and managing director of the Swiss nonprofit Food Packaging Forum Jane Muncke told Reuters. Plastic chemicals can leach into water and food and cause complications including fertility issues and cardiovascular disease.

Policymakers are working on tackling plastic pollution: While the plastics industry advocates for recycling and re-use, experts argue that addressing plastic waste alone isn’t sufficient to safeguard public health. Greater transparency is needed regarding the chemicals used in plastics (including recycled materials) given that a quarter of chemicals in plastic lack basic information about their chemical identity. Negotiations by the UN to establish the world’s first treaty aimed at reducing plastic pollution are still ongoing, with about 400 mn tons of plastic waste produced every year, Reuters writes.

#2- Over 230 of some 1k companies that joined the Business Ambition for 1.5 °Ccampaign have failed to submit sufficient climate targets and have been removed, The Financial Times reported on Friday.The campaign — launched by the standard-setting body Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) in 2021 to provide a check on whether companies are in line with a global goal to limit warming to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels — gave companies two years to submit net zero emissions targets and has since removed around 500 companies from their approval process, including Microsoft, Unilever, Adani Green Energy, for not meeting standards.

The companies axed from the database are shifting the blame: The companies that did submit adequate targets argued that a lack of supporting policy frameworks make it difficult to meet emissions reductions targets as fast as planned, the news outlet said. Of the companies removed for not submitting a net zero target in the first place, 21% chalked it up to the difficulty of curbing scope 3 emissions which account for the largest portion of their carbon footprint. Meanwhile, other companies pointed their fingers at the SBTi for making their criteria “too abstract” and “too far in the future.”

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CIRCLE YOUR CALENDAR-

The UAE will host the World Future Energy Summit from Tuesday, 16 April to Thursday, 18 April in Abu Dhabi. The summit will address solutions for development in the transformation of future energy systems. The summit will also feature discussions on recycling, waste-to-energy, and air-to-water trends and progressions.

The UAE will host the Connecting Green Hydrogen MENA event from Tuesday, 23 April to Thursday, 25 April in Dubai. The event will explore green hydrogen partnerships, policies, and practices in the region, in parallel to a showcasing of the latest in the clean fuel’s technology.

Oman will host the Oman Sustainability Week from Sunday, 28 April to Thursday, 2 May in Muscat. The event will focus on exploring investment opportunities and implementing best practices in sustainability within the energy, water, and environmental sectors.

The UAE will host The Electric Vehicle Innovation Summit from Monday, 20 May to Wednesday, 22 May in Abu Dhabi. The event will see industry leaders come together to discuss sustainable mobility and tapping into groundbreaking advancements in electric vehicles while engaging with key decision-makers.

Check out our full calendar on the web for a comprehensive listing of upcoming news events, national holidays and news triggers.

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DEBT WATCH

Masdar secures EUR 488 mn financing package for Baltic Eagle acquisition

Masdar secures funds for Baltic Eagle acquisition: UAE renewables firm Masdar has reached financial close on EUR 488 mn in funding to secure its 49% acquisition of the 476 MW Baltic Eagle wind farm off the coast of Germany, according to a statement published on Friday. Masdar entered an strategic agreement with Spanish utility provider Iberdrola back last July to coinvest in the purchase of a the EUR 1.6 bn project. The lending package marks Masdar’s largest EUR-denominated financing.

About the wind farm: Baltic Eagle is currently being built off Germany’s northeastern coast and will comprise 50 wind turbines, each with a 9.53 MW generation capacity. The project — which is slated to kick off initial operations by the end of 2024 — will produce 1.9 TWh of clean energy once it achieves full production capacity, providing renewable power to some 475k homes and offsetting c. 800k tons of carbon emissions annually. 100% of Baltic Eagle’s production volume has already been sold via long-term offtake agreements.

Who’s backing the transaction? ABN AMRO, Credit Agricole CIB, ING, Santander, and Siemens Bank have contributed to the lending package, and Santander acted as financial advisor.

Masdar is expanding its EU presence: Masdar finalized the acquisition of a 49% stake in the UK’s 3 GW Dogger Bank South wind farm from German energy giant RWE earlier this month. Masdar and RWE agreed to co-develop the Dogger Bank South wind farm which will be split across two sites with 1.5 GW of capacity each. The first 800 MW of electricity is expected to come online in 2029. Masdar and RWE are also operating the 630 MW London Array offshore wind farm.

IN OTHER MASDAR NEWS- Another Uzbekistan venture: Masdar signed an agreement with Uzbekistan’s state hydroelectric power producer JSC Uzbekhydroenergo to explore the feasibility of developing large-scale pumped storage hydro projects across Uzbekistan, according to a statement released on Friday. Pumped storage hydro is crucial for stabilizing the intermittent supply from renewable sources like solar and wind, offering a utility-scale storage solution. Masdar already connected 1.4 GW of renewable energy from wind and solar projects to Uzbekistan’s grid last December.

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GREEN FINANCE

The EU lends a boost for Egypt’s green transition and renewables exports

The EU pledges EUR bns to Egypt: The EU is set to provide Egypt with a EUR 7.4 bn package of loans, grants, and investments — including some in the green energy sector — through to 2027, after President Abdel Fatteh El Sisi signed a joint strategic partnership and comprehensive agreement with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen at the Ittihadiya Palace yesterday evening (watch, runtime: 1:03:10).

The breakdown of the funding:

  • EUR 5 bn in concessional loans to provide macro-financial assistance, according to a statement (pdf) by the bloc.
  • EUR 1.8 bn of “additional” investments under the Southern Neighborhood Economic and Investment Plan.
  • EUR 600 mn in grants,including EUR 35 mn for installing additional renewable energy capacities under the government’s Nexus for Food, Water, and Energy initiative.

Does it sound familiar? The EUR 35 mn to develop Egypt’s renewable energy capacities under the government’s Nexus for Food, Water, and Energy initiative (NWFE) listed in the statement accompanying the agreement was originally announced back in 2022, as was the EUR 100 mn from the Food and Resilience and Facility.

One of the partnership’s mutual interest pillars focus on the green transition: As part of the investment and trade pillar, green hydrogen, industrial projects, water security, digitization, and agriculture, and other areas are expected to bring in up to EUR 5 bn of Egypt-bound investment from Europe guaranteed by the European Fund for Sustainable Development and Economic Investment Plan. Towards this end, the bloc will support an EU-Egypt Investment Conference in the second half of the year to encourage private sector inflows into Egypt from Europe.

Renewables cooperation seems to have really caught the interest of the EU: “Egypt has all the resources to become a renewables hub, in particular when it comes to renewable hydrogen,” Leyen said at the presser, adding that the agreement includes stepping up energy flows to help Europe “move further away from Russian gas”. The bloc signaled its intention to invest in our green hydrogen ambitions and projects like GREGY — one of Egypt’s planned electricity linkups with Greece — to enable exports of Egyptian renewable energy into Europe.

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M&A WATCH

Kuwait Petroleum International to purchase 50% of Italian biofuels company

Kuwait Petroleum International (KPI)’s Italian office is set to acquire a 50% stake in Italian biofuels firm Eco Fox, KPI’s CEO Shafi Taleb Al-Ajmi told Kuwait News Agency (Kuna) on Friday. The financial details of the agreement were not disclosed and the agreement is pending approval from Italian authorities.

Why is this important? The acquisition will support KPI’s goals of developing, producing and distributing alternative fuels, Al-Ajmi told Kuna, adding that it also aims to help the company achieve its 2050 energy transition targets. KPI supplies fuel to 70 international airports and manages 2.8k gas stations in Italy, Kuna notes.

About Eco Fox: Eco Fox is an Italian renewable fuel producer and distributor which produces biodiesel made from vegetable oil, animal fat, and recovered used cooking oil. The company’s plant has a production capacity of 200k tons per year. Eco Fox also produces byproducts including glycerine, acid oils and potassium salts which can be used in agriculture.

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SOLAR

Algeria’s Sonelgaz awards contracts for 3 GW of solar projects

Algerian state-owned energy company Sonelgaz awarded 20 solar projects with a total capacity of 3 GW to a mix of local companies and foreign companies, according to a statement published on Thursday. The 20 solar plants will be constructed across 17 provinces. The companies awarded contracts, the investment tickets for individual projects, and the timelines for development were not disclosed.

Background: Sonalgaz first tendered 15 solar energy stations with a capacity ranging from 80-220 MW across 12 states last October, then followed it up for a secondary tender including five stations with a capacity ranging from 50-300 MW distributed across 5 states, according to the statement. Both tenders attracted 20 bidders and a total of 77 offers.

Part of a bigger plan: Algeria has handed Sonelgaz the responsibility of producing 15 GW of renewable energy by 2035 from renewables. The country had about 423 MW of solar capacity installed by the end of 2021, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency.

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MOVES

Fahad Misfer Al-Battar tapped as CEO of Sabic Agri-Nutrients

Fertilizer maker Sabic Agri-Nutrients has appointed Fahad Albattar (LinkedIn) as its new CEO, the company said in a disclosure to Tadawul last week. He is replacing Abdulrahman Ahmed Shamsaddin who has been tapped for a top executive position at parent company Sabic. Albattar will assume his new role on 1 April.

Albattar is no stranger to the company: Albattar brings over 25 years of experience in executive leadership with positions at Sabic and its subsidiaries since 1997. His most recent position was Chief Operations Officer at SABIC Agri Nutrients Company. He previously served as president of several of Sabic’s subsidiaries, including Al Sharqiyah Petrochemicals Company (Sharq), Al Jubail Fertilizer Company (Al Bayrouni), and Saudi Petrochemical Company (Sadaf).

REMEMBER- The Saudi chemicals manufacturer is riding the energy transition train: Sabic Agri-Nutrients shipped in June its first 5k metric ton load of low-carbon ammonia to Taiwan. The shipment in June followed another 5k ton load of low-carbon ammonia to India in May, an undisclosed quantity to Japan in April, and 25k tons of low-carbon blue ammonia to South Korea last November.

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ALSO ON OUR RADAR

Tunisia secures USD 520 mn from World Bank to shore up food security

DEBT WATCH-

World Bank helps tackle Tunisia’s climate-driven food security challenges: The World Bank has approved two loans for Tunisia totaling USD 520 mn aimed at combating food security challenges and regional disparities, according to a statement released on Friday. The first loan of USD 300 mn will finance the Emergency Food Security Response Project to help address the impact of drought on food security by supporting wheat imports, providing barley for milk production, and distributing climate-resilient seeds for wheat producers. The second USD 220 mn loan will fund the Tunisia Economic Development Corridor project, aimed at reducing regional economic disparities by improving road infrastructure and enhancing access to finance for small and medium-sized enterprises in the region.

We knew this was coming: The World Bank first announced that it could extend a support package to Tunisia to address the impact of climate change on the country’s food security last month. Tunisia stands to lose up to USD 54 bn by 2050 due to the effects of climate change, the lender estimates, and needs to boost its water and agriculture resilience. Droughts have caused a two-thirds drop in the harvest of some of Tunisia’s crops

GREEN INDUSTRY-

Schneider Electric and Saudi tech company DataVolt have signed an agreement to partner on data center sustainability and innovation, a press release said on Thursday. The partnership will involve exploring joint initiatives within DataVolt’s sustainability strategy and decarbonization roadmap, as well as advance digital infrastructure and energy management solutions for hyperscale data centers in KSA. The two firms will also explore avenues for establishing digital infrastructure and energy management solutions for the specific needs of hyperscale data centers. Schneider will also support DataVolt by contributing to a more sustainable data center industry in KSA, develop future-proof data centers that meet ever-growing demand for hyperscale computing power, and optimize energy usage and minimize operational costs for the data centers, the release says.

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AROUND THE WORLD

The offshore wind sector is growing but ships are struggling to keep up

The demand for ships capable of installing offshore wind turbines is outstripping supply as offshore wind capacity is expected to increase 5x between 2022 and 2035, Bloomberg reported on Thursday. Larger ships are required to transport wind turbines that can reach up to 300 meters in length. The industry is faced with the challenge of building new installation vessels — which takes at least three years and USD 400 mn each — or retrofitting older ones, which is also costly and time-consuming.

Hyundai and Kia are recalling 170k EVs in South Korea due to problems with the charging system software, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing the country’s transport ministry. The software issue could make it harder to charge low-voltage batteries and possibly cause the car to stop while driving. Hyundai will recall almost 114k EVs of five different models, while its sister company Kia will recall 56k vehicles.

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ON YOUR WAY OUT

Fast fashion is turning to climate adaptable lines as seasons change

Fashion brands embracing versatility amid climate chaos:Fast fashion giants like Mango are turning away from seasonal clothing and moving towards garments that can accommodate rapidly shifting weather patterns, Chief Executive Toni Ruiz told Reuters last week. Light trench coats and breathable “performance” fabrics for men and women are types of transitional clothing suitable for both cool and warm days, Ruiz said. Europe is one of several regions in the world that have experienced the warmest February on record, with European temperatures reaching 3.3°C above average.

Mango is diversifying its supply chain: Mango now sources trend-dependent items from European manufacturers and functional wardrobe pieces from Asian manufacturers, maintaining a flexible supply chain, the newswire writes. This has helped the company avoid losses from the ongoing Red Sea shipping crisis. To further enhance operations, Mango is investing in expanding stores and developing technology, including AI for trend tracking and consumer data analysis.

Why is this important? Clothing that is functional year-round could result in less textile waste from both retailers and consumers, Euro News writes. As shoppers opt towards more versatile pieces, a shift away from the current seasonal model used by the fast fashion industry could occur.

Is it enough to tackle fast fashion’s waste crisis?The EU and the UK government are preparing to follow the lead of Sweden, the Netherlands, and Italy in taxing fashion companies in a bid to crack down on discarded textiles clogging landfills globally. The governments are reportedly preparing to enact legislation to have fashion brands fund textile recycling programs to support countries like Ghana, which receives some 15 mn discarded garments on a weekly basis. Ghanaian clothes traders visited Brussels last June to lobby for EU legislation that would force the European fashion industry to stop dumping tons of textiles in the West African country.

It may be better to overhaul the materials used altogether: Alternative materials used to make garments are growing traction worldwide, such as plastic collected from beaches in Tunisia and biodegradable leather made from shrimp shells by an American startup. US retail corporation Walmart also partnered with California-based startup Rubi Laboratories last August to capture carbon emissions generated by its supply chain and convert it into biodegradable apparel collections. Researchers at Texas A&M University even found that dead black soldier flies could be turned into biodegradable plastic.


MARCH 2024

19-29 March (Monday-Friday): International Seabed Authority Assembly and Council, Kingston, Jamaica.

APRIL 2024

16-18 April (Tuesday-Thursday): World Future Energy Summit, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

16-18 April (Tuesday-Thursday): Middle East Energy, Dubai, UAE.

19 April (Friday): Global Stocktaking on SDG7, New York, US.

22-24 April (Monday-Wednesday): Oman Petroleum and Energy Show, Mustac, Oman.

23-25 April (Tuesday-Thursday): Connecting Green Hydrogen MENA, Dubai, UAE.

24-26 April (Wednesday-Friday): Global Education & Training Exhibition (GETEX), Dubai, UAE.

28-29 April (Sunday-Monday) Global Cooperation, Growth and Energy for Development,Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

28 April-2 May (Sunday-Thursday) Oman Sustainability Week, Oman International Exhibition Center, Muscat.

30 April-2 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Autonomous E-Mobility Forum, Doha, Qatar.

MAY 2024

6-9 May (Monday-Thursday): Arabian Travel Market, Dubai, UAE.

7-9 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Global Waste Forum, Algiers, Algeria.

14-16 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Airport Show, Dubai, UAE.

18-25 May (Saturday-Saturday) The World Water Forum, Bali, Indonesia.

19-21 May (Sunday-Tuesday): Saudi Energy Convention, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

20-22 May (Monday-Wednesday): Electric Vehicle Innovation Summit, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

28-30 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Make it in the Emirates Forum, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

JUNE 2024

5 June (Wednesday): World Environment Day, Saudi Arabia.

11-12 June (Tuesday-Wednesday): International Conference on Financing Investment and Trade in Africa (FITA 2024), Tunis, Tunisia.

OCTOBER 2024

15-17 October (Tuesday-Thursday): EV Auto Show, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

NOVEMBER 2024

4-8 November (Monday-Friday): World Urban Forum, Cairo, Egypt.

11-14 November (Monday-Thursday) Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition & Conference (ADIPEC), Abu Dhabi, UAE.

DECEMBER 2024

2-13 December (Monday-Friday): Conference of the Parties (COP16) to the United Nation Convention to Combat Desertification, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

2024

Early 2024: The 2023 US Algeria Energy Forum, Washington DC, USA.

12-14 February (Monday-Wednesday): Sustainable Aviation Futures MENA Congress, Dubai, UAE.

End-2024: Emirati Masdar’s 500 MW wind farm in Uzbekistan to begin commercial operations.

QatarEnergy’s industrial cities solar power project will start electricity production.

2025

International Union for Conservation of Nature World Conservation Congress, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

UAE to have over 1k EV charging stations installed.

2026

26-29 October (Monday-Thursday): World Energy Congress, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

UITP Global Public Transport Summit, Dubai, UAE.

Annual Meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, Bangkok, Thailand.

1Q 2026: QatarEnergy’s USD 1 bn blue ammonia plant to be completed.

End-2026: HSBC Bahrain to eliminate single-use PVC plastic cards.

2027

MENA’s district cooling market is expected to reach USD 15 bn.

World Water Forum, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

2030

UAE’s Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank (ADCB) wants to provide AED 35 bn in green financing.

UAE targets 14 GW in clean energy capacity.

Tunisia targets 30% of renewables in its energy mix.

Qatar wants to generate USD 17 bn from its circular economy, creating 9k-19k jobs.

Morocco’s Xlinks solar and wind energy project to generate 10.5 GW of energy.

2035

Qatar to capture up to 11 mn tons of CO2 annually.

2045

Qatar’s Public Works Authority’s (Ashghal) USD 1.5 bn sewage treatment facility to reach 600k cm/d capacity.

2050

Tunisia’s carbon neutrality target.

2060

Nigeria aims to achieve its net-zero emissions target.

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