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AMEA Power joins second phase of the Agadir desalination project in Morocco
AMEA Power joins second phase of the Agadir desalination project in Morocco

Zawya

time01-08-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

AMEA Power joins second phase of the Agadir desalination project in Morocco

The Agadir desalination plant in Morocco will be expanded to 400,000 m³/day, marking AMEA Power's first water desalination project in North Africa. The facility will be powered by AMEA Power's 150 MW wind power plant in Laayoune. Dubai, UAE – AMEA Power, one of the fastest-growing renewable energy companies in Africa, is pleased to announce its entry into the second phase of the Agadir desalination project in Morocco. The facility will be powered by AMEA Power's 150 MW wind project in Laayoune. Once operational, it will become the company's first water desalination plant in North Africa. Upon completion of the expansion, the Agadir desalination plant will reach a total capacity of 400,000 m³/day, making it one of the largest desalination facilities in Africa. While the first phase of the plant has been developed and is currently owned by Spanish Cox, a global leader in water and energy management, the second phase will be delivered through a joint venture, with AMEA Power joining the project and supplying renewable energy through its wind farm in Laayoune. This project is the first to be executed further to the strategic joint venture agreement signed in May 2025 between AMEA Power and Cox. It reflects the shared ambition of both companies to deliver integrated infrastructure projects where access to water and energy are deeply interconnected. The total investment for the second phase of the desalination project and the associated wind power facility is expected to exceed €250 million. The desalination expansion is expected to be operational end of 2026, with the wind farm coming online in 2027. Hussain Al Nowais, Chairman of AMEA Power, said: "Our entry into the second phase of the Agadir desalination project in Morocco, under the Water Alliance Ventures platform, reflects AMEA Power's ambition to address both water and energy challenges through integrated solutions. This project is not only our first entry into the water sector in North Africa – it is also a powerful example of what long-term partnerships can achieve for sustainable development across the region'. The project also reaffirms AMEA Power's commitment to Morocco, a core market in the company's long-term strategy. With several clean energy projects already under development across the country, AMEA Power remains fully aligned with the Kingdom's ambitions to advance renewable energy, water security, and sustainable development. About AMEA Power Headquartered in Dubai, AMEA Power is a developer, investor, owner and operator of renewable energy projects. As one of the fastest-growing renewable energy companies in the region, AMEA Power has assembled a world-class team of industry experts to deliver projects across Africa, the Middle East, and emerging Asia. With projects in 20 countries, a 6GW+ project pipeline, and 2,600MW+ in operation and under construction, the company is rapidly expanding its investments in wind, solar, battery storage, water desalination and green hydrogen, demonstrating its long-term commitment to the global energy transition and water security.

Political tides in Africa are shifting: Britain must be clear who its friends are
Political tides in Africa are shifting: Britain must be clear who its friends are

Telegraph

time03-06-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

Political tides in Africa are shifting: Britain must be clear who its friends are

While the world's attention has understandably been focussed on events in Ukraine and Gaza, the Foreign Secretary 's recent visit to Morocco saw Britain seize the initiative on a diplomatic issue that has been neglected by the international community for nearly half a century; that of the status of Western Sahara, under administration by Morocco since 1975, but whose sovereignty over the region has been disputed by the Algerian-backed Polisario Front, sometimes violently, for decades. This example of British diplomatic engagement is particularly significant in the context of the new Strategic Defence Review, and the British Government's stated aim of enhancing national security through economic growth. This vast territory of more than 100,000 square miles is home to 565,000 people – a population roughly the size of Leeds, spread across an area bigger than the United Kingdom, although largely concentrated in the town of Laayoune, the regional capital, and Dakhla, the largest and fastest growing container port on the east Atlantic coast. Morocco has invested heavily and imaginatively in the Western Sahara, providing tens of thousands of new jobs, and the prospect of many more to come, yet its full economic development has been held back by a frozen territorial dispute, which has contributed to a deteriorating humanitarian situation in the Tindouf refugee camps in Algeria. Under an encouragingly wide-ranging partnership agreement signed this week between London and Rabat, the UK has, for the first time, acknowledged the autonomy plan proposed by Morocco as the most credible, viable and pragmatic basis for a lasting peace in the Western Sahara. The autonomy plan, first presented to the United Nations in 2007, represents the only credible, lasting solution for peace in the Western Sahara. Under its provisions, an autonomous region would be established within the Moroccan State, with Morocco taking responsibility for defence and foreign affairs, but with local control over law enforcement, taxation, infrastructure, economic development, cultural affairs and the environment. By accepting the broad principles of the autonomy plan, UK diplomacy at last moves into line with other key western allies including France, Spain and the United States, shifts the dial at the UN Security Council and within the General Assembly and lays the ground for a definitive, permanent resolution of the dispute. Such a resolution is in the best interests of the people of the Western Sahara, and it is by far the best hope of bringing prosperity, and economic and human development to that region, and wider. UK support for the Moroccan autonomy plan, in conjunction with a comprehensive range of other cultural and economic initiatives of great mutual benefit, seems to be firmly in line with the Foreign Secretary's declared diplomatic approach of 'progressive realism'. It demonstrates a recognition by the FCDO that the political tides in Africa are shifting once again, and that the UK needs to be clear-sighted about who its friends are, which countries can be trusted and reliable partners, and which countries are offering opportunities for the continent's potential and solutions to its challenges. In this respect, Morocco has proved to be a bulwark against terrorism, extremism, serious crime, illegal migration and the destabilising activities of Russia's and Iran's proxies in sub-Saharan Africa – and the autonomy plan offers further, exciting economic opportunity and potential. It is security, stability and prosperity that will help address the humanitarian issues of the refugee camps, undermine the poisonous appeal of extremism and slow migration, and offer hope. Those that oppose this move, with an insistence on perpetuating a deadlock, have their own vested interests that offer nothing to the people of the region. Supporting stability in the Sahara is politically and diplomatically the right thing to do, but our support for Morocco and its ambitions in the region also will unlock huge economic opportunities for British companies, and this UK-Moroccan partnership includes a £5 billion facility from UK Export Finance, which in turn will drive faster economic growth across the region. Trade with Morocco is already a quiet success story for Britain, and trade between our two countries has already almost doubled since 2018, to over £4.2 billion in 2024. Morocco plays an important role in ensuring supermarkets are stocked year-round, without competing with our own farmers and fishermen, and tomatoes, sardines and soft fruit are among our biggest imports. Britain's ambition of becoming a clean energy superpower can be boosted by access to landmark projects in solar, wind and green hydrogen through this new partnership. UK companies can also play a significant role in equipping Morocco's healthcare system with digital tools, medical equipment and pharmaceuticals, while there are new safeguards against the counterfeiting of British brands. I would hope that further defence engagement opportunities were also discussed in these meetings – not simply defence sales and training, but the possibility of greater cooperation in the eastern Atlantic to address new maritime challenges. Britain and Morocco have been engaged with each other for over 800 years. The first Moroccan ambassador came to London in 1600 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, and our first trade treaty was signed over 300 years ago. We are now moving into a new era, looking to address challenges and seize opportunities together. Last year, the Foreign Secretary spoke of a reset in relations between Britain and Africa, and a strategic engagement with the continent grounded in 'progressive realism'. The UK's re-energised partnership with Morocco, putting security, stability and prosperity at the forefront of this engagement, proves that those sentiments were not just words.

Western Sahara: France's AFD to Invest €150 Million in Morocco's Southern Provinces
Western Sahara: France's AFD to Invest €150 Million in Morocco's Southern Provinces

Morocco World

time11-05-2025

  • Business
  • Morocco World

Western Sahara: France's AFD to Invest €150 Million in Morocco's Southern Provinces

Rabat — France is committed to supporting Morocco's territorial integrity and sovereignty over its southern provinces in Western Sahara. France displayed this commitment through the latest announcement from the French Development Agency (AFD), which is planning to make major investments of €150 million in Morocco's southern provinces. The agency's Director General, Remy Rioux, announced the news from Laayoune during his visit to the region as part of the flurry of visits by French official delegations carried out since the country's newfound historic recognition of Morocco's sovereignty over its southern provinces in Western Sahara. 'The AFD Group will now invest in the southern regions by bringing in investments and financing,' Rioux told the press, noting that he is 'very impressed' by the investments and the quality of infrastructure that the region witnessed recently. He said this contributed to job creation to meet the expectations of youth in the region. The director also welcomed the presence of private companies and the establishment of industrial zones in the region, adding that AFD's investment in Laayoune Sakia El Hamra serves as a signal to encourage more economic stakeholders. France announced its recognition of Morocco's sovereignty over its southern provinces in July of last year in a letter Emmanuel Macron directed to King Mohammed VI. In the message, Macron informed the monarch that the present and future of Western Sahara lie within Morocco's sovereignty over its southern region. He also highlighted the importance of the Moroccan Autonomy Plan as the only feasible political solution to end the dispute. The letter was followed by a State visit by Macron in October of the same year, in which he publicly announced the European country's decision in the Moroccan parliament, noting that France's decision is hostile to nobody. His remarks came in response to Algeria's regime maneuvers and attempts lobbying against France's newfound position, as Algiers has been challenging Morocco's territorial integrity for years by harboring the Polisario Front and financing its hostile terrorist acts against Rabat and interfering in its domestic affairs. Since Macron visited Morocco, official delegations have visited the North African country, especially visiting the southern region for the first time in their capacity as French officials. The delegations that visited southern provinces included Minister of Culture Rachida Dati and Ambassador Christophe Lecourtier, among several others. The latest historic decision France took also includes expanding its consular services to Morocco's southern provinces, particularly to residents of Laayoune, Dakhla, and Es-Semara. This means that for the first time, residents of the region will be able to apply for French visas directly from their city. France confirmed the expansion of its visa services to the region during the official inauguration of a new TLS visa center, which handles consular applications, in Casablanca in April. Tags: AFD in MoroccoAfDB €117 million loan to Morocco

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