Amid Push For Renewable Energy, Saudi Arabia Cautiously Turns Over Green Leaf
Fawzia Sheikh
Riyadh plans to spend $170 billon over the next five years on energy and oil refining efforts; the country's state-owned oil company, Saudi Aramco, will bankroll little more than half this endeavor, according to the Saudi Gazette. The energy giant called it unrealistic for
"I don’t think that’s surprising,” said Eurasia Group energy analyst Will Pearson of the guarded approach, adding that Saudi Aramco has long been hesitant given the state’s status as the world’s leading oil producer.
Without a “huge, revolution[ary], game-changing technology,” an abrupt shift in the “fuel mix” is doubtful, said Pearson, who puts more stock in green technologies gradually scooping up market share. Given the abundance of other resources, the Saudi government is more likely to make such nascent energy sources a smaller part of its overall budget, he argued.
Despite trepidation, the Gulf country has been drawn to the "relatively unproven technologies" of biofuels and electric vehicles even though, for the most part, "people are going to be dependent on the oil sector for transport," Pearson told OilPrice.com. Given its access to sunlight,
Yet growing pains are bound to accompany this push away from traditional oil and gas, analysts warn.
“You have to come up with the right regulatory regime,” Pearson said. While some companies are already doing “quite well” in this young energy category, traditional fossil fuels are still a less costly option, he said. An international carbon price would help but “I don’t think there’s been a lot of progress on that,” he said.
The bottom line is that the new industry has to beat traditional hydrocarbons, said Molly Williamson, a consultant and scholar at the Middle East Institute in
Though it’s uncertain how much these new technologies will cost, “what we know is it isn’t cheap,” Williamson told OilPrice.com. “You’re looking at a long-term projection of unknowable cost. The people that can do that now are the people who can afford it.” This includes not just Gulf nations, she explained, but countries with hard-currency reserves.
What is promising is that many Gulf Cooperation Council countries, as well as oil-producing regions in the Middle East and
The eager drive toward alternative energy is, in part, a bid to meet two of the fastest-growing markets in the world:
In the oil-producing pockets of the Middle East and
The Middle East has dabbled in new brands of energy for a decade, but the “incredible run-up” that took place in 2007 to 2008 on the heels of the economic crisis made it “more dramatic,” said Williamson.
Apart from
And energy importer
But the
This makes the U.A.E., by far, “ahead of the game” compared to its neighbours in protecting itself against the “shocks and volatility” of traditional markets like the
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By. Fawzia Sheikh for Oilprice.com who offer detailed analysis on Crude oil, Geopolitics, Gold and most other <a href="http://oilprice.com/Metals/Commodities/" target="new">Commodities</a>. They also provide free political and economic intelligence to help investors gain a greater understanding of world events and the impact they have on certain regions and sectors. Visit: http://www.oilprice.com
April 27, 2010