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Renewable Energy ‎Market Analysis: The GCC Region

The countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) could reap multiple benefits from scaling up renewable energy use, including reducing water withdrawal by 11 trillion litres (or 16%) and saving 400 billion barrels of oil in the power sector, creating 2000, direct jobs and reducing the region’s per capita carbon footprint 8% by 2030.

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The countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) could reap multiple benefits from scaling up renewable energy use, including reducing water withdrawal by 11 trillion litres (or 16%) and saving 400 billion barrels of oil in the power sector, creating 2000 direct jobs and reducing the region’s per capita carbon footprint to 8% by 2030.

Renewable Energy Market Analysis: The GCC Region looks at the opportunities and barriers for renewable energy deployment in the GCC economies and offers recommendations for greater integration of renewables into the regional energy mix. This analysis from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) highlights the best practices in policy-making, project development and financing that have begun paving the way for more sustainable energy systems. The report also examines the potential for renewables-based desalination to address the need for sustainable water supply in the arid GCC region.

The six-member GCC holds almost a third of the world’s proven crude-oil reserves and about a fifth of natural gas reserves. Exports of these fossil fuels have underpinned impressive economic growth, which has brought widespread prosperity and rapid development in the region. However, industrialisation, population growth and increasing water desalination have led to high energy demand growth, affecting the ability of some GCC countries to maintain export levels over the long term.

The resulting market dynamics have compelled governments to embark on a diversification strategy. The addition of other sources, including renewables, into the region’s energy mix presents ample opportunities, both through freeing up domestic energy production for export and reducing carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions. Other socio-economic benefits include job creation and local economic diversification.