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UAE’s Ocior Energy is on track to build a USD 4 bn green hydrogen plant in Egypt

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

TODAY: UAE’s Ocior Energy has its eye on a mega green hydrogen plant in Egypt

Good morning, ladies and gents. We have some big green hydrogen news from the region and an interesting update on what can be done about our bovine methane-producing friends. Let’s dive right in.

THE BIG CLIMATE STORY- Abu Dhabi-headquartered green fuels developer Ocior Energy has been named as the undisclosed company with its eyes on a space in Egypt’s green hydrogen push. The company signed preliminary agreements with the Egyptian government to build a USD 4 bn green hydrogen production plant in the Suez Canal Economic Zone.

^^ We have more details on this story and more in the news well, below.

THE BIG CLIMATE STORY OUTSIDE THE REGION- There’s no single climate story dominating international headlines this morning, but the German Cabinet agreed to allocate EUR 57.6 bn (c. USD 63.2 bn) for green investments next year, Reuters reports. The allocation is up 60.2% from this year’s target as the country tries to build up subsidies to help the country reach net zero by 2045. Most of the funds will be earmarked to the country’s building sector, with EUR 18.9 bn for subsidies in renovations and new construction. Renewable energy subsidies have been set at EUR 12.6 bn, while EUR 3.7 bn will be directed to boosting Germany’s e-mobility charging infrastructure.

ALSO MAKING HEADLINES- Scientists are on the lookout for other factors that could have triggered this summer’s record breaking heat, The Associated Press reports, as July was officially deemed the Earth’s hottest monthon record. They all agree that the biggest trigger was global warming from the continued burning of coal, oil, and natural gas, as well as El Niño, while some scientists believe other factors could be fueling a hotter planet such as cleaner air resulting from new shipping rules and a South Pacific volcano that released 165 mn tons of water into the atmosphere.

How and why: The dirty fuel used in maritime shipping releases particles that reflect sunlight in a manner that helps lower temperatures, so new international shipping rules triggered in 2020 to slash 80% of those cooling particles was a “kind of shock to the system,” atmospheric scientist Tianle Yuan said. The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai underwater volcano is also a suspect, with scientists saying that its released water was acting as a heat-trapping greenhouse gas as vapor.


WATCH THIS SPACE #1- Egypt’s GAFI launches a simplified corporate incorporation process: Egypt’s General Authority for Freezones and Investment (GAFI) electronically incorporated Damietta for Green Ammonia through a newly launched online platform created to ease the process for investors, according to a statement. The platform will enable investors to digitally incorporate their firms and settle establishment fees electronically using e-signatures, GAFI CEO Hossam Heiba said. The new online system will allow investors to check for updates on the status of their applications while GAFI finalizes the process and receive personalized guidance based on their respective industries, including business structure frameworks and the required documents and fees for corporate incorporation.

WATCH THIS SPACE #2- Vestas expects wind turbine backlog to weigh on earnings: Danish wind turbine maker Vestas said it expects rising costs from a backlog of wind turbine orders to bring down its full year earnings, Bloomberg reports. This comes a month after a key supplier of blades to Vestas published an income warning on higher inspection and repair costs after it found faults with a blade type at one of its factories. It still expects full year earnings before interest and taxes to fall within the range -2% to 3%, marking an improvement from the -8% for last year. However, costs for an existing backlog soared to EUR 51.6 bn from a year earlier.

REMEMBER- Vestas is no stranger to some in the region: An international consortium led by Vestas is expected to begin operations at its 250 MW wind farm in Egypt’s Gulf of Suez by early 2024. It was named recently among companies planning to bid for a five- to seven-year operation and maintenance contract for the 120 MW Gabal El Zeit 3 plant in Egypt.

ALSO- Others could be gone with the wind: Siemens Energy’s wind turbine unit problem is not expected to recover before 2026, Reuters reports, citing JPMorgan and Deutsche Bank analysts. The predictions come days after Siemens Energy revealed that the issue will cost EUR 2.2 bn for its Siemens Gamesa. Deutsche Bank analyst Gael de-Bray has cut the price target for Siemens Energy to EUR 18 per share from EUR 20, maintaining a “hold” rating, while JPMorgan downgraded the stock to “neutral” from “overweight.”


WATCH THIS SPACE #3- Brazil could be among the SAF kings: Brazil has the capabilities to become among the leading global players in sustainable aviation fuel, Reuters reports, citing Boeing's Latin America and the Caribbean head Landon Loomis. “Brazil has the technical capacity, qualified workforce and raw material to post the concrete results and impacts needed for us to solve together this global challenge of how to decarbonize aviation,” Loomis said at a forum. His statements come as the aviation sector tries to meet ambitious targets to become carbon neutral by 2050 as set by IATA.

REMEMBER- The EU has agreed earlier this year to set binding targets for European aviation to boost its use of SAF in a bid to decarbonize the industry. The proposal aims to increase the use of SAF by ensuring fuel suppliers have 2% of the fuel accessible at EU airports as SAF in 2025, rising to 6% in 2030, 20% in 2035, and 70% in 2050. The EU carbon market is set to provide about EUR 2 bn to help airlines switch to SAF. Some 1.2% of fuels must also be synthetic fuels from 2030, rising to 35% in 2050. Aviation is a difficult sector to decarbonize and net zero aircrafts are not expected for another 10 years.


DATA POINT #1- Companies are scaling up green energy investments: 19% of global corporations have said they will increase their investments in clean energy and energy efficiency by more than half by 3Q 2024, according to a survey (pdf) of 751 international firms carried out by Honeywell and The Futurum Group. 86% of respondents are increasing investments in sustainability-linked initiatives this quarter, and 67% of EMEA-based companies — which include firms out of the EU and MENA — cite sustainability-linked initiatives as their top corporate focus for the next six months. 87% of global respondents and 61% EMEA corporations cited enhancing energy evolution and power efficiency as their foremost corporate priority for the coming six months. 78% of EMEA firms have said they have set out 2030 goals for energy evolution and efficiency, 73% have set out a strategy for emissions reduction, 74% have for pollution prevention, and 71% have 2030 circularity/recycling targets in place.

DATA POINT #2- Plastic litter in the oceans is overestimated, but still growing y-o-y, a new study in Nature Geoscience finds. Around 500k tons of plastic waste end up in the oceans each year, well below estimates from a 2015 study concluding that some 8 mnmetric tons of plastic make their way to the oceans every year from rivers alone. However, marine pollution is still growing by around 4% y-o-y, the latest study finds. Incremental additions of plastic to global waterways lead to a significant accumulation of waste over time, the authors caution, noting that in two decades the current amount of 3 mn plastic tons on the global sea surface could double, according to the New York Times.


NON-CLIMATE REGIONAL HEADLINES:

  • UAE: The Central Bank of the UAE has revoked the license of exchange house Dirham Exchange and canceled the registration of RMB Commercial Brokers Co over serious regulatory misconduct. (Emarat Al Youm)
  • Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabia’s aid agency KSRelief and the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office have signed a joint agreement to provide USD 9.16 mn in assistance to those affected by the Sudanese crisis. (Asharq Al Awsat)
  • Egypt: The number of tourists visiting Egypt rose by 46.6% y-o-y in 2022 to report 11.7 mn, according to statistics agency CAPMAS, as the country bets on the key sector to bring in much needed FX for the struggling economy. (Al Shorouk)

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CIRCLE YOUR CALENDARS- The Enterprise Finance Forum is taking place on 18-19 September at the St. Regis Hotel in Cairo. This flagship forum is the latest in our must-attend series of invitation-only, C-suite-level gatherings that allow senior members of our community to openly and frankly discuss critical issues in key sectors of the economy.

TAP OR CLICK HERE if you want to express interest in attending. We’ll be sending out the first batch of invitations soon.

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DID YOU MISS THE ENTERPRISE EXPORTS AND FDI FORUM? Tune in to the Enterprise Podcast and listen for yourself: The Enterprise Podcast is back with another installment of our forum series, where we bring you audio recordings of what was said on stage at the Enterprise Exports and FDI Forum, which took place in May.

WANT TO LISTEN? Head to: Apple Podcast | Spotify | Google Podcast | Anghami | Omny.

IT’S THE FINAL EPISODE- Our final panel of the day was, naturally, the most forward looking. Our panelists discussed how the companies — be they in age-old industries or emerging ones — have adapted to changes to better position their businesses for an uncertain future. We were joined by Nadia El Tawil, investment officer at pan-African private equity firm AfricInvest, Mostafa Bedair, CEO of Giza Seeds and Herbs, and Abdallah Sallam, CEO of Madinet Masr.

THE ENTERPRISE CLIMATE FORUM SERIES KICKS OFF NEXT SUNDAY- Fresh off the heels of a successful COP27, we held our first forum at the Grand Egyptian Museum, diving deep into the fundamentals of what we think is the world’s most important industry. The conversations ranged from exploring the business opportunities for Egyptian entrepreneurs, companies and startups in climate, to demystifying green hydrogen, and how we finance our green transition.

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YOU’RE READING ENTERPRISE CLIMATE, the essential regional publication for senior execs who care about the world’s most important industry. Enterprise Climate covers everything from finance and tech to regulation, products and policy across the Middle East and North Africa. In a nod to the growing geographical ambitions of companies in our corner of the world, we also include an overview of the big trends and data points in nearby countries, including Africa and southern Europe.

Enterprise Climate is published by 5am CLT / 5am Riyadh / 6am UAE Monday through Thursday by Enterprise, the folks who bring you Enterprise Egypt, your essential 6am and 3pm read on business, finance, policy and economy in Egypt and emerging markets.

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CIRCLE YOUR CALENDAR-

Sweden will host World Water Week from Sunday, 20 August to Wednesday, 24 August in Stockholm. Organized by the Stockholm International Water Institute, the event will bring together policy makers, NGOs, and private sector players to discuss innovative solutions to managing water and how to tackle food security, biodiversity, and climate change.

The US will host the International Conference on Recycling and Waste Management and the International Conference on Environmental Sustainability and Climate Change from Monday, 21 August till Tuesday, 22 August in Philadelphia. The waste management conference will gather environmental engineers, and recycling, wastewater treatment, and climate researchers to discuss trends and innovations in plastics recycling, wastewater treatment, and renewable energy. The sustainability and climate change conference will bring together researchers and industry leaders to spotlight innovations in environmental science, climatology, renewable energy, and pollution control.

The Dominican Republic will host the COP27 Transitional Committeefrom Tuesday, 29 August to Friday, 1 September. The meeting aims to establish institutional arrangements, modalities, governance structures, and terms of reference for the landmark Loss and Damage Fund. It also wants to expand sources for climate funding under the program.

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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Opening up a world of opportunity
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GREEN HYDROGEN

UAE’s Ocior Energy is on track to build a USD 4 bn green hydrogen plant in Egypt

We have more details on yesterday’s green hydrogen proposal: Abu Dhabi-headquartered green fuels developer Ocior Energy has signed preliminary agreements with the Egyptian government to build a USD 4 bn green hydrogen production plant in the Suez Canal Economic Zone (SCZone), head of Commercial Services at Egypt’s Trade and Industry Ministry Yehia El Wathiq Bellah told Enterprise Climate. The Indian company is expected to finalize the project agreement in coming months, Al Wathiq Bellah said.

The details: Ocior — which will pour USD 800 mn in annual investments for the project — has already signed a land allocation agreement with the government, and the green hydrogen facility is expected to be completed in five to six years, El Wathiq Bellah told us.

Powered by renewables, marked for export: The Egyptian cabinet released a statement yesterday saying the plant’s production capacity is estimated at 400k tons per year with production earmarked for export to Europe at an estimated value of USD 1 bn. The facility would source its power needs from 15 GW of solar energy, the statement added.

The plans have been brewing: The company signed an MoU with Egypt’s Electricity and Renewable Energy Ministry for the project in December, noting it is eyeing a production capacity of 100k tons of green hydrogen per year from its first phase by 2027 with an increase to 1 mn tons per annum when fully operational by 2030, according to a statement released at the time. Ocior chose to establish its green hydrogen plant in the Suez Canal due to its proximity to European markets, the company said.

About Ocior: The company has a target to deploy 4 GW of green hydrogen capacity by 2030, it notes. Ocior signed an MoU with the Government of Odisha in India last December to establish a green hydrogen plant that will produce 1 mn tons once fully operational in 2030, and is looking to establish green hydrogen facilities with similar production capacities in Abu Dhabi and India’s Gujarat.

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GREEN HYDROGEN

KSA’s Hydrogen Systems tapped to build Oman’s first green hydrogen refueling station

Shell Development Oman has selected Saudi Arabia based hydrogen provider Hydrogen Systems to develop Oman’s first green hydrogen refueling station, Oman Observer reports. Under the agreement, Hydrogen Systems will design, develop and install the refueling station in Muscat. No financial details or a timeline for launch of the project were provided.

There’s more refueling stations coming: Oman Shell and Oman Airports Management will set up solar-powered green hydrogen fueling stations near Oman International Airport by 2024 as part of the first phase of the country’s three-phase green mobility plan. The plan aims to facilitate the use of hydrogen cells for heavy long-distance trucks, adding hydrogen fueling stations to existing gas stations, and setting necessary frameworks and legislation for future mobility.

The UAE is way ahead with its projects: UAE’s Adnoc broke ground on the Middle East’s first high-speed hydrogen refueling station last month in Masdar City. The project is expected to be completed and operational this year. Adnoc is also set to fit a second station based in Dubai Golf City with a conventional hydrogen fueling system. The stations will be tested by a fleet of clean hydrogen-powered vehicles provided by Toyota and Al Futtaim Motors. The energy giant’s plans come under a USD 15 bn allocation by Adnoc in January to advance and accelerate low-carbon solutions, new energy investments and decarbonization technologies in a bid to slash its carbon intensity by 25% by 2030.

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SOLAR

Iran kicks off operations on the first phase of a 300 MW solar plant

Iran kicked off operations on the first phase of a 300 MW solar energy farm in the country, the Fars News Agency reports. The initial phase of the project will cost IRR 40 bn (c. USD 945.3k) and span 700 square meters, with a generation capacity of 140 KW of solar power. The farm is expected to reach its full production volume in four years, the news agency quotes Deputy Minister Mahdi Farahi as saying.

Part of larger solar plans: Iran’s Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Organization (Satba) announced plans earlier this year to re-tender solar energy projects yielding 2.2 GW during the current Iranian fiscal year in a bid to expand net-zero power production. In July, Satba announced plans to build a 1 GW solar farm in Qazvin. From our neck of the woods, the UAE’s AJ Holdings signed an agreement back in 2021 with Iranian utility company Khuzestan Regional Electric Co. to build a 300 MW solar plant in the province of Khuzestan.

Big renewables targets: Iran’s renewables sector — which accounts for nearly 7% of the country’s total energy generation — relies mostly on solar, hydroelectric, and wind power plants to generate energy. Last year, Iran said it plans to add 10 GW of renewable capacity by August 2025. It also signed MoUs with the private sector last year to set up new renewable power plants across the country.

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EARNINGS WATCH

Abdul Latif Jameel-backed EV maker Rivian net loss recovers in Q2 with a 67.5% increase in revenues

A better than expected 2Q for Rivian: Abdul Latif Jameel-backed EV startup Rivian Automotive reported a narrower-than-expected net loss for the second quarter of the year, its earnings release (pdf) showed on Tuesday. Its net loss narrowed to USD 1.2 bn in 2Q 2023, from USD 1.7 bn during the same quarter last year. The company reported an adjusted net loss per share of USD 1.08, better than Wall Street estimates of USD 1.43 a share for Rivian.

Robust revenues: Revenues were up 67.5% y-o-y bringing in USD 1.12 bn, up from USD 364 mn in the corresponding quarter last year. The boost came on the back of a rise in quarterly sales.

Solid production and deliveries: Rivian said it produced 13.9k vehicles and delivered 12.6k vehicles during the second quarter of the year, representing a 50% rise in production in comparison with the previous quarter. The increase was backed by the continued ramp of its in-house production of its Enduro motor line to support its commercial vehicle line as well as single motor variants and its dual-motor R1 variants.

How did they do it? Rivian took several steps earlier this year to cut expenditures and bolster its balance sheet. Those include a 6% cut in workforce in February and a USD 1.3 bn sale of convertible notes in March. It also postponed the rollout of its smaller R2 vehicle platform to 2026 instead of 2025.

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KUDOS

KSA’s Acwa Power surpasses UAE’s Taqa as worlds largest water developer outside of China

KSA’s Acwa Power has surpassed the Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa) as the world’s largest water project developer outside China, UK-based international water sector publisher Global Water Intelligence said in a statement. The new figures reveal that Acwa Power has 6.8 mn cubic meters (cbm) of gross capacity and 3.2 mn cbm per day of net capacity, where the gross figure represents the total output of plants in which the company holds a stake and net capacity is the amount equivalent to the percentage of stakes it holds.

REMEMBER- Acwa Power has been pushing forward with renewables-powered desalination: The company inaugurated the USD 650 mn Jubail 3A independent water desalination plant with a production capacity of 600k cbm of desalinated water per day in June. The plant was the first to be powered by solar. Last month, the utilities giant also signed an agreement with Japan’s Toray Industries to enhance the energy efficiency of desalination plants.

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AROUND THE WORLD

Brazil’s Lula tries to secure a unified front for Amazon ahead of COP28

No deforestation goal agreed upon at Amazon summit: Eight Amazon nations failed to reach consensus on a common goal to end deforestation at a major rainforest summit held in Brazil’s Belem, although they did agree to a number of unified environmental policies and measures to strengthen regional cooperation, Reuters reports. Although the summit aimed to create an alliance to combat deforestation, it left each country to determine its own deforestation targets. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has been trying to bring the Amazon nations together behind a unified policy to end deforestation by 2030, a goal his own country has already adopted.

But perhaps a unified front at COP28? Lula hopes rainforest countries will present a unified front at international climate talks, according to another Reuters report. He has repeatedly urged wealthy nations to deliver on pledges for climate finance for poor and vulnerable nations who contribute little to global warming. “We want to prepare for the first time a joint document of all forest countries to arrive united at COP28, in the United Arab Emirates, that we can seriously discuss with rich countries,” Lula said last week.


Japan partners with Namibia in search for EV battery minerals: The Japanese government has signed an agreement with Namibia to jointly explore for cobalt and other minerals critical to EV battery production in the African country, Reuters reports. Namibia has known deposits of lithium, graphite, tantalum, and cobalt, which was first discovered in the country in 2018. The Japan Organization for Metals and Energy Security is already working with Namibia's state-owned mining firm Epangelo on developing the country’s Lofdil project, which has reserves of yttrium — critical to wind turbine manufacturing — as well as dysprosium and terbium, both valuable rare earths used in permanent magnets that go into EVs and wind turbines.

OTHER STORIES WORTH KNOWING ABOUT THIS MORNING-

  • China snaps up a 60% share of global EV sales in 1H: Chinese EV manufacturers recorded a 48% y-o-y rise in sales for 1H, selling some 3.65 mn vehicles and capturing 60% of the global EV market. (Global Times)
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ALSO ON OUR RADAR

Oman’s on the hunt for vanadium for the energy transition and a Gulf-backed project will receive funding from the UK Space Agency

An Omani push for vanadium: Oman's Sohar Port and Freezone has signed a land lease agreement with Sohar Noble Metals (FZC) to set up a USD 7 mn vanadium and niobium metal production facility in the freezone, according to a statement. The project — which will span an area of 5k square meters — will have its production supplied to superalloy industries in the US and European markets. It expects the facility’s production to lure further investments from companies that rely on the crucial metals, the statement notes.

Vanadium has been grabbing interest regionally: Canada’s Elcora Advanced Materials tapped mineral processing company Lab 4 for the design and testing of its planned vanadium pentoxide plant in Morocco earlier this year. It aims to use the extracted vanadium to produce vanadium pentoxide, an industrial chemical used as a catalyst in the production of redox flow batteries — a type of battery that is being studied and deployed globally for large-scale grid storage projects.


Gulf carbon mapping project set to receive funding from the UK: A joint project between Bahrain, the UAE, and the UK for the deployment of high resolution carbon mapping sensors was amongst 32 projects selected to receive up to GBP 75k as part of the UK Space Agency’s International Bilateral Fund, according to a statement. The sensors will be used to monitor greenhouse gas emission management programmes in the Gulf region, the statement added. The agency’s bilateral fund holds GBP 20 mn worth of investments, with GBP 2.1 mn earmarked for the 32 projects.

OTHER STORIES WORTH KNOWING ABOUT THIS MORNING-

  • Bahrain marches ahead with solar: Solar projects totalling 218.8 MW are being developed in Bahrain, which currently has a total renewables capacity of 51.9 MW. (Report,pdf)
  • Big dip in emissions for Mubadala Energy: Abu Dhabi sovereign investor Mubadala’s subsidiary Mubadala Energy reported a 41% drop in Scope 1 greenhouse gas emission intensity between 2021 and 2022. (Wam)
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CLIMATE IN THE NEWS

AI programed robotic arms are 3-4x more effective at waste sorting for recycling

AI robots can help recover more waste for recycling: Companies including US-based AMP Robotics and EverestLabs, Canada-based Machinex, and UK-based Recycleye are using AI and robotics to more effectively and quickly sort waste for recycling, CNBC reports. Robotic arms, programmed to sort through tons of waste, are able to identify specific materials and recover 10 to 30% more than traditional methods, CEO of EverestLabs JD Ambati told CNBC. One method used by EverestLabs is installing 3D depth-sensing cameras on recycling conveyor lines to identify the items on the conveyor. This method allows EverestLabs to identify up to 200 items in each frame, as well as what types of packaging they contain, all within 12 milliseconds per item.

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ON YOUR WAY OUT

Can we breed the methane-laden burps out of cows?

Can selective breeding reduce emissions from our methane-burping friends? 107 cows in Canada are undergoing a first-time experiment of being bred with the specific goal of burping less methane, Reuters reports. Canadian dairy farmer Ben Loewith artificially inseminated the cows and heifers in June with the first-to-market bull semen containing a low-methane genetic trait. Genetics company Semex, who sold Loewith the semen, said adoption of the low-methane trait could reduce methane emissions from Canada's dairy herd by 1.5% annually, and up to 20% to 30% by 2050.

How did they do it? The breeding material is the product of a partnership between Semex, Canada's milk-recording agency Lactanet, and research carried out by University of Guelph and University of Alberta, the newswire writes. Lactanet drew on seven years of research capturing the exhalations of cattle to measure them for methane, and then compared the data against genetic information and milk samples. “The breakthrough here is linking these different components to have a national breeding value estimation for methane emissions based on real breath of animals,” one of the scientists that worked on the project told Reuters.

Global interest, but there are some critics: Semex has already sold some of its products to farms in Britain and dairies in the US and Slovakia, the newswire reports. Some dairy industry officials, however, remain unconvinced about low-methane breeding, saying it could lead to digestion problems.

But there are other ways to address the problem: New Zealand is taxing farmers formethane from cattle starting 2025, and food and drinks conglomerate Restaurant Brands International is feeding cattle less methane-producing foods. Additionally, multilateral organizations like the UN and the World Health Organization agree that reducing the number of cattle by encouraging people to adopt more plant-based diets can significantly decrease methane emissions from livestock herds.


AUGUST 2023

20-24 August (Sunday-Wednesday): World Water Week 2023, Stockholm, Sweden.

21-22 August (Monday-Tuesday): International Conference on Recycling and Waste Management, USA.

21-22 August (Monday-Tuesday): International Conference on Environmental Sustainability and Climate Change, USA.

29 August-1 September (Tuesday-Friday): Third meeting of the COP27 Transitional Committee, Dominican Republic.

SEPTEMBER 2023

4-6 September (Monday-Wednesday): Sustainable Maritime Industry Conference, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

4-6 September (Monday-Wednesday): Africa Climate Summit, Nairobi, Kenya.

5-7 September (Tuesday-Thursday): Global Water, Energy and Climate Change Congress(GWECCC), Manama, Bahrain.

9-10 September (Saturday-Sunday): G20 Heads of State and Government Summit, New Delhi, India.

9-20 September (Saturday-Wednesday): 2023 Sustainable Development Goals Summit, New York, USA.

11-13 September (Monday-Wednesday): Global Congress on Renewable and Non-Renewable Energy, Dubai, UAE.

12-13 September (Tuesday-Wednesday): Industry Transition 2023, Pittsburgh, USA.

12-15 September (Tuesday-Friday): WTO Public Forum, Geneva, Switzerland.

18-19 September (Monday-Tuesday): The Enterprise Finance Forum, Cairo, Egypt.

19-21 September (Tuesday-Thursday): World Power-to-X Summit, Marrakesh, Morocco.

28 September (Thursday): International Energy Agency Critical Minerals and Clean Energy Summit, Paris, France.

Chariot Limited and Total Eren’s feasibility study on a 10 GW green hydrogen plant in Mauritania to be completed.

Egypt set to launch alliance to shore up climate financing in developing countries

OCTOBER 2023

4 October (Wednesday): Arabia CSR Gala Awarding Ceremony, UAE.

4-5 October (Wednesday-Thursday): Future Sustainability Forum, Dubai, UAE.

8-10 October (Sunday-Tuesday): Saudi Green Building Forum, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

10-11 October (Tuesday-Wednesday): Green Energy Africa Summit, Cape Town International Convention Centre 2, Cape Town, South Africa.

8-12 October (Sunday-Thursday): MENA Climate Week, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

9-15 October (Monday-Sunday): World Bank/IMF 2023 Annual Meetings, Marrakech, Morocco.

10-12 October (Tuesday-Thursday): Autonomous E-Mobility Forum, Doha, Qatar.

16-18 October (Monday-Wednesday): Climate Week, Rome, Italy.

18-20 October (Wednesday-Friday): Morocco and Belgium business meeting on green hydrogen, Tangiers, Morocco.

17-18 October (Tuesday- Wednesday): Critical Minerals Africa Summit, Cape Town, South Africa.

17-20 October (Tuesday-Friday): Fourth meeting of the COP27 Transitional Committee, TBD.

25-26 October (Friday-Saturday): Offshore & Floating Wind Europe 2023, London, United Kingdom.

29 October- 2 November (Sunday-Thursday): Cairo Water Week, Cairo, Egypt

31 October – 2 November (Tuesday-Thursday): World Hydropower Congress, Bali, Indonesia.

NOVEMBER 2023

1-3 November (Wednesday-Friday): Forbes Middle East Sustainability Leaders Summit 2023, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

9-10 November (Thursday-Friday): International Renewable Energy Agency Investment Forum, Uruguay.

9-15 November (Thursday-Wednesday): Intra-African Trade Fair 2023, Cairo, Egypt.

15-17 November (Wednesday-Friday): WETEX and Dubai Solar Show, Dubai, UAE.

16-17 November (Thursday-Friday): World Green Economy Summit (WGES), Dubai, UAE.

15-18 November (Wednesday-Saturday): DEWA’s First MENA Solar Conference, Dubai, UAE.

20-24 November (Monday-Friday) International Civil Aviation Organisation’s Aviation and Alternative Fuels conference, Dubai, UAE.

27-30 November (Monday-Thursday) Abu Dhabi Finance Week (ADFW), Abu Dhabi, UAE.

30 November - 12 December (Thursday-Tuesday): Conference of the Parties (COP 28), Dubai, UAE.

DECEMBER 2023

12-14 December (Tuesday-Thursday): Green Hydrogen Summit Oman, Oman Convention and Exhibition Center, Muscat, Oman.

18-20 December (Monday-Wednesday): Saudi Arabia Smart Grid Conference, Hilton Riyadh Hotel & Residences, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

FEBRUARY 2024

26-28 February (Monday-Wednesday): Management and Sustainability of Water Resources, Dubai, UAE.

APRIL 2024

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

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

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

2023

Mid-2023: Oman set to sign contracts for green hydrogen projects.

Mid-2023: Sale of Sembcorp Energy India Limited to consortium of Omani investors to close.

Phase C of the 900-MW of the Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park in Dubai to be completed.

Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (Sabic) steam cracker furnace powered by renewable energy to come online.

2024

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

UITP Global Public Transport Summit, Dubai, UAE.

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.

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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