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Morocco, UAE Consortium to Invest in Strategic Water, Energy Infrastructure
Morocco, UAE Consortium to Invest in Strategic Water, Energy Infrastructure

Maroc

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Maroc

Morocco, UAE Consortium to Invest in Strategic Water, Energy Infrastructure

A Moroccan-Emirati consortium including the Mohammed VI Investment Fund, TAQA Morocco—part of Abu Dhabi's TAQA Group—and NAREVA has signed three memoranda of understanding with the Moroccan government and the state utility ONEE to develop large-scale water and energy infrastructure. The agreements, sealed under a declaration signed by HM King Mohammed VI and UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan in December 2023, cover critical projects in desalination, electricity generation and transmission, and water transfer systems. The program aims to address Morocco's pressing water scarcity and energy demands, while advancing the country's long-term goals of energy independence and climate resilience. The proposed investments include: Water Transfer: Construction of a pipeline between the Sebou and Oum Rabia basins with an annual capacity of 800 million cubic meters to mitigate regional water stress. Desalination: Development of seawater desalination plants powered entirely by renewable energy, totaling 900 million cubic meters per year. Target costs are capped at MAD 4.5/m³ (excluding VAT), in line with current national benchmarks. Electricity Transmission: A 1,400-km high-voltage direct current (HVDC) line linking southern and central Morocco, with 3,000 MW capacity, to facilitate renewable energy distribution. Renewables: Deployment of 1,200 MW in new green electricity capacity. Gas Power: Construction of a 1,500 MW combined-cycle natural gas power plant at the Tahaddart site to support grid stability. Each project will be governed by individual development agreements between ONEE and the consortium. The first such agreement, covering the Tahaddart power plant, has already been finalized. The consortium will lead the structuring and mobilization of financing, drawing from both domestic and international lenders. The timeline targets phased completion by 2030, subject to regulatory approvals, including merger control procedures. The initiative is expected to generate over 25,000 jobs—10,000 of them permanent—and foster a local industrial base in desalination and renewable technologies. It also aims to spur workforce training and technology transfer. Framed as a transformational public-private partnership, the program underscores Morocco's ambition to secure critical resources, attract foreign investment, and position itself as a regional leader in sustainable infrastructure. MAP: 20 mai 2025

Morocco, UAE Sign $14 Billion Megadeal: Key Details on the Largest Private Investment in Morocco's History
Morocco, UAE Sign $14 Billion Megadeal: Key Details on the Largest Private Investment in Morocco's History

Morocco World

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • Morocco World

Morocco, UAE Sign $14 Billion Megadeal: Key Details on the Largest Private Investment in Morocco's History

Doha – The largest private investment in Morocco's modern history has just been inscribed in the country's economic annals. Yesterday, the country sealed an extraordinary $14 billion accord with the United Arab Emirates – an injection of unprecedented scale that promises to permanently alter the country's water and energy equation, while fundamentally reshaping its infrastructure landscape for generations to come. The ceremonial ink still fresh, the agreement binds Morocco's government and the National Office of Electricity and Drinking Water (ONEE) with a consortium of financial titans: the Mohammed VI Investment Fund, TAQA Morocco (the local subsidiary of Abu Dhabi's energy colossus), and Nareva (the energy arm of the royal holding Al Mada). At MAD 130 billion ($14 billion), this collaboration transcends mere commercial arrangement – it heralds a profound reengineering of critical national infrastructure by 2030. Central to this ambitious blueprint stands a colossal 1,400-kilometer high-voltage transmission corridor stretching from Western Sahara to Casablanca, complemented by a network of sophisticated seawater desalination facilities. These projects emerge as the culmination of meticulous diplomatic chess moves, coming just five months after King Mohammed VI's private visit to Abu Dhabi and 18 months following his official state visit to the Emirati capital, where the groundwork for this Moroccan-Emirati renaissance was carefully laid. Water security: A thirst for innovation Desert kingdoms understand water's value. The consortium's hydric strategy unfolds with architectural precision: a vast network connecting the Sebou and Oum Rabia river basins, engineered to channel 800 million cubic meters annually across thirsty territories. The first phase of water transfer between the Sebou and Bouregreg basins became operational in August 2023, successfully diverting approximately 350 million cubic meters to the Sidi Mohammed Ben Abdellah dam, critical for supplying drinking water to the Rabat region. Four jewels in this water crown will rise across Morocco's map. In Tanger, a 50-million-cubic-meter annual capacity station will quench the industrial thirst of this burgeoning port hub. Nador's installation, six times more ambitious at 300 million cubic meters, will transform the eastern region's hydric calculus. The agricultural heartland of Souss will benefit from Tiznit's 350-million-cubic-meter facility – the largest of the quartet. Completing this hydraulic network, either Tan-Tan or Guelmim will host a 100-million-cubic-meter operation to serve the arid southern frontier. These cutting-edge desalination facilities, engineered to operate exclusively on renewable energy, will collectively produce 900 million cubic meters annually. Notably, they will maintain competitive pricing at or below MAD 4.50 per cubic meter (excluding tax), aligning with national benchmark rates established for ongoing desalination initiatives – all without requiring public subsidies. The electric heartbeat: Energy sovereignty reimagined The consortium's energy infrastructure vision is anchored by a groundbreaking high-voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission network spanning 1,400 kilometers between Morocco's southern territories and its central economic hub. This sophisticated 'electricity highway' will connect Dakhla to Casablanca with a 3,000 megawatt capacity, dramatically strengthening energy distribution capabilities while catalyzing economic and industrial development throughout the corridor. This transmission masterpiece will be fed by 1,200 megawatts of fresh renewable capacity, predominantly harvested from the sun-drenched southern provinces. The geographic strategy is to harness the natural abundance of Morocco's desert regions, translate it into clean energy, and deliver it to industrial centers at competitive rates. Complementing these renewable ambitions, the Tahaddart complex will undergo a renaissance. This gas-fired installation will see its capacity quadrupled through new combined-cycle units, elevating total output to 1,500 megawatts. This expansion offers crucial ballast to a grid increasingly danced upon by the variable rhythms of wind energy. The human dividend, capital choreography, and implementation cadence Beyond pipes and pylons lies perhaps the most valuable yield: people. This grand design promises to spawn over 25,000 employment opportunities through construction and operation, with 10,000 permanent positions taking root after commissioning. The consortium envisions not merely infrastructure but ecosystem – a fertile soil where technology transfer blooms and local industrial expertise in desalination and renewable energy flourishes. From this terrain will grow new educational pathways and technical specializations, training the standard-bearers of Morocco's water and energy future. The financial architecture of this mammoth endeavor will be orchestrated by the consortium, drawing capital from domestic and international financial wellsprings. The urgency is palpable; the project's partners have pledged to assemble elite technical minds to ensure methodical implementation through 2030. As with all ventures of this magnitude, regulatory gauntlets must be run, particularly regarding concentration operations. Each project component will be governed by bespoke development agreements between ONEE and the consortium. The first such accord, focusing on Tahaddart's expansion, has already materialized. The architects of the alliance This historic partnership harmonizes complementary strengths. Nareva, Morocco's private electricity champion, brings 3,200 megawatts of installed capacity producing over 15 terawatt-hours annually. As Africa's wind energy pioneer, it operates eleven parks totaling 1,810 megawatts alongside the thermal goliath of Safi (1,386 megawatts). With extensive expertise in electrical transmission infrastructure (exceeding 300 kilometers of high-voltage lines) and advanced water engineering, Nareva currently leads the innovative Amensouss project and is constructing the world's first exclusively renewable-powered desalination facility in Dakhla. TAQA Morocco, publicly traded on the Casablanca Stock Exchange since 2013, delivers 34% of Morocco's national electricity requirements despite representing only 17% of installed capacity. With a strategic focus on desalination, renewable energy development, low-carbon solutions, and infrastructure networks, the company actively advances national energy transition objectives and water security initiatives. Its parent organization, Abu Dhabi National Energy Company PJSC (TAQA), operates as a diversified energy and utilities powerhouse with operations spanning 25 countries worldwide. A diplomatic masterpiece These accords signal the diplomatic renaissance between Morocco and the Emirates after a period of relative ambiguity. They physically manifest the vision sketched during King Mohammed VI's December 2023 meeting with Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan – a blueprint for collaboration in strategically vital domains. This official visit established a 'renewed partnership' between the Maghreb and Gulf country with announcements of strengthened collaboration in strategic domains including energy and infrastructure development. The sovereign's subsequent private voyage proved equally fertile, brokering peace between telecommunications titans Maroc Telecom and Inwi, ending a decade-long legal skirmish and birthing a joint venture to develop 5G infrastructure for international events including the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations and the 2030 World Cup. For fifteen years, Morocco has methodically invested in renewable energy, which now covers 38% of its electricity needs, with aspirations to reach 52% by 2030. Simultaneously confronting chronic water scarcity, the kingdom has embraced desalination as salvation. This Emirati partnership accelerates both these vital transitions, binding two desert nations in a quest for resource security and sustainable prosperity. Tags: Morocco UAErenewable energyUAE Investmentwater security

Morocco and UAE discuss civil aviation cooperation at Global Symposium
Morocco and UAE discuss civil aviation cooperation at Global Symposium

Ya Biladi

time11-02-2025

  • Business
  • Ya Biladi

Morocco and UAE discuss civil aviation cooperation at Global Symposium

In Abu Dhabi, the Minister of Transport and Logistics, Abdessamad Kayouh, engaged in discussions with the UAE Minister of Economy, Abdullah bin Touq Al Marri, focusing on enhancing bilateral cooperation in civil aviation. The talks occurred on the margins of the Fourth Global Symposium to Support Implementation in Civil Aviation, currently taking place in Abu Dhabi. Kayouh highlighted that the meeting provided an opportunity to review advancements in the civil aviation sector and explore ways to bolster Moroccan-Emirati collaboration. This dialogue is particularly significant as Morocco is actively developing projects in preparation for hosting the 2030 World Cup and other major sporting events, with a strong emphasis on advancing its civil aviation capabilities. Additionally, the meeting served as a platform to advocate for Morocco's bid to host the upcoming International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) conference. The Kingdom is considered a strong contender to welcome this prestigious event next year in Marrakech. Guiouh is leading a prominent delegation at the Fourth Global Symposium to Support Implementation in Civil Aviation, organized by the General Civil Aviation Authority of the United Arab Emirates (GCAA) in collaboration with ICAO. This symposium marks the launch of the UAE's 'Global Sustainable Aviation Marketplace' initiative, aiming to accelerate the production of alternative and low-carbon fuels for the aviation sector while enhancing its safety and security.

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