UAE Energy Sector
Today's mix, 2030/2050 targets, every flagship project with real numbers, and the regulatory + buyer hierarchy. Memorise the figures cold β UAE energy interviews live and die on quantitative precision.
- UAE energy mix today
- Targets β 2030 and 2050
- Utilities β single-buyers and integrated
- Generators & IPP developers
- Barakah Nuclear
- Al Dhafra Solar PV (PV2)
- Mohammed bin Rashid Solar Park
- Khazna PV1 β world record tariff
- Grid & transmission
- Energy efficiency & demand-side
- District cooling β UAE specialty
- Building rating systems
UAE energy mix today (~2025-2026)
The UAE national grid sits at roughly 38β40 GW of installed generation capacity, with peak demand around 34β35 GW (typically hit August afternoons due to cooling load, which is ~70% of summer peak).
| Source | Capacity (GW) | Share | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural gas (CCGT + open cycle) | ~24β25 | ~62% | Dominant fuel; mainly ADNOC Gas + LNG |
| Nuclear (Barakah Units 1β4) | 5.6 (4 Γ 1.4 GW APR-1400) | ~14% | All four units commercial (Unit 4 commissioned 2025) |
| Solar PV (utility) | ~6.5 | ~16β17% | Noor AD 1.2 GW + Al Dhafra 2.0 GW + MBR Park ~3.0 GW operational |
| Wind | 0.103 | <0.3% | Masdar 103.5 MW multi-site (Sir Bani Yas, Delma, Al Sila, Al Aryam) |
| Waste-to-energy / biogas | ~0.2 | <1% | Sharjah Bee'ah Warsan, Dubai Warsan |
| Diesel / HFO peakers | residual | <2% | Mostly RAK/Northern Emirates legacy |
Clean energy (nuclear + renewables) is currently around 30β33% of installed capacity but a higher share of zero-carbon electricity generation (~37β40%) because Barakah runs at >90% capacity factor while gas peakers cycle.
Targets β 2030 and 2050
By 2030
- 30% clean energy in total energy mix
- ~14 GW renewables (revised up post-COP28)
- Tripling of renewables under UAE Consensus pledge
- Dubai 25% clean
- 30% methane reduction (Global Methane Pledge)
By 2050
- 50% clean energy in total energy mix
- ~140 GW total capacity (44% renewables, 38% gas, 12% clean coal-to-gas, 6% nuclear)
- Net Zero economy-wide
- Dubai 75% clean energy β 100% under Dubai Net Zero 2050
- AED 600 bn (USD 163 bn) investment envelope
Utilities β single-buyers and integrated
Single-buyer for AD; merger of Adwec + TRANSCO commercial. Procures all IPP/IWPP capacity, signs PPAs/PWPAs. Issued the Al Dhafra and Khazna PV2 tenders.
Generation + T&D + retail for Dubai. Owns/operates MBR Solar Park via Hassyan/Shuaa subsidiaries. Listed on DFM since April 2022 (largest UAE IPO).
Integrated for Sharjah; gas-heavy fleet. Signed 60 MW Khorfakkan PV (2023). Procuring further IPPs.
FEWA serves Northern Emirates (RAK, UAQ, Ajman, Fujairah). EtihadWE (formed 2020 from FEWA T&D arm) runs T&D in Northern Emirates; works closely with EWEC.
Major generators / IPP developers
| Company | Role | UAE flagship |
|---|---|---|
| TAQA | Largest UAE generator (~22 GW global, ~18 GW UAE); ADQ owns ~98% | Mirfa, Shuweihat, Fujairah F1/F2, Taweelah B; majority owner of Masdar (43%) |
| Masdar | Pure-play renewables/clean tech; JV TAQA 43% / Mubadala 33% / ADNOC 24% | Al Dhafra 2 GW, Noor 1.17 GW, MBR Solar Park phases 3 & 6 |
| ENGIE | French IPP, JV partner | Mirfa (~1.6 GW + 52.5 MIGD), Fujairah F2, UAQ RO |
| ACWA Power | Saudi-listed, largest int'l IPP in MENA | MBR Solar Park phases 2/3/5, Hassyan IWP |
| EDF | French IPP | DEWA Hassyan IWP, MBR phase 5 PV (consortium) |
| Marubeni / JERA / Mitsui / KEPCO | Asian utility partners | Multiple IWPPs and Barakah |
| Sumitomo / Sembcorp | Smaller but active | Sembcorp 60 MW Khorfakkan IPP |
Barakah Nuclear Power Plant
Operator: Nawah Energy Company (ENEC + KEPCO 82/18 JV).
Commercial dates: U1 Apr 2021, U2 Mar 2022, U3 Feb 2023, U4 Sep 2024 (declared commercial ops 2025).
Al Dhafra Solar PV (PV2)
Consortium: TAQA + Masdar + EDF + JinkoPower (EWEC IPP). COD: Nov 2023. Powers ~160,000 homes; avoids 2.4 Mt COβ/yr.
Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park
Currently ~3.0 GW operational, target 5.0 GW by 2030. IPP model.
| Phase | Capacity | Tariff | Sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ph1 (2013, in-house) | 13 MW | β | DEWA |
| Ph2 | 200 MW | $58.50/MWh | ACWA |
| Ph3 | 800 MW | $29.90/MWh | Masdar/EDF |
| Ph4 (PV+CSP hybrid) | 950 MW (700 CSP + 250 PV) | β | ACWA/SEPCO/Shanghai Electric (world's largest CSP) |
| Ph5 | 900 MW PV | $16.95/MWh | ACWA |
| Ph6 (awarded Apr 2023) | 1.8 GW | ~$16.20/MWh | Masdar |
| Ph7 (EOI 2024) | 2.4 GW PV + ESS | β | β |
Khazna PV1 β world record tariff
Consortium: EDF + Korea Western Power + Nebras.
- Bifacial module costs collapsed to ~$0.10/Wp by 2024
- DC/AC ratios of 1.4β1.5 squeeze more energy from cheap modules
- UAE land cost essentially zero on TAQA-EWEC concessions
- Financing USD at sub-5% all-in for 30-year sovereign-backed PWPA
- Low political risk premium
- Construction risk carried by experienced consortia (EDF, Masdar, ACWA)
Other flagship operating projects
- Noor Abu Dhabi (Sweihan) β 1,177 MW, online 2019, single-axis tracking, EWEC + JinkoPower + Marubeni. $24.20/MWh (record at award 2017). Original world's-largest single-site at COD.
- Hassyan IPP β 1.8 GW (Dubai gas plant pivoted from clean coal to CCGT)
- Hatta Pumped Storage (DEWA) β 250 MW / 1,500 MWh, Voith equipment, COD 2025/2026
- 24/7 Carbon-Free Energy IPP (Masdar/EWEC, 2024) β 5 GW solar + 19 GWh BESS targeting >1 GW round-the-clock baseload from renewables β first global tender of this scale
Grid & transmission
- UAE-GCC Interconnection (GCCIA): 400 kV link via Saudi/Oman; UAE export capacity ~1.2 GW
- Al Fujairah Water & Power Hub: ~3.7 GW + ~1,100 MIGD desalination β most concentrated industrial site in UAE
- TRANSCO (under EWEC group): Abu Dhabi 400/220/132 kV operator
- DEWA-T&D: Dubai 400/132/33 kV, ~22 substations 400 kV
Energy efficiency & demand-side
ESCO model
Etihad ESCO (Dubai) β DEWA subsidiary, set up 2013 as the Super-ESCO for Dubai. Mandate: retrofit 30,000 buildings by 2030 to cut Dubai energy demand 30% by 2030 (Dubai DSM Strategy 2030). EPC contracts via shared/guaranteed savings models. As of 2024: retrofitted ~10,500 buildings, saving >300 GWh/yr and >1.6 m IG/d water.
Industrial efficiency
- ADNOC Decarbonization Plan: flaring reduction (already at ~0.07% of gas produced β among lowest globally), waste heat recovery, electrification of compression with renewables/nuclear (Project PHOENIX / Ta'ziz Power Network connecting offshore platforms to onshore grid)
- EGA (Emirates Global Aluminium): world's first commercial use of CelestiAL solar aluminium (using Noor Abu Dhabi PPA); reduced emissions intensity to ~6.7 t CO2e/t Al (industry avg ~16)
District cooling β UAE's specialty
UAE has the world's largest installed base of district cooling. Cooling is roughly 70% of UAE summer peak demand.
| Operator | Capacity | Owner | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Empower | ~1.7 m RT | 100% DEWA | ~80 plants; serves ~140,000 customers Dubai. Listed on DFM Nov 2022 |
| Tabreed | ~1.4 m RT | Mubadala 42% | ~92 plants UAE/KSA/Oman/Bahrain/India/Egypt. Serves Masdar City, Yas Island, Sowwah Square |
| Emicool | ~270k RT | Dubai Holding 50% / Union Properties 50% | Recently restructured |
| PAL Cooling, Stellar Energy, Dalkia/EDF | β | β | Smaller players |
DC achieves 35β45% energy savings vs unitary AC for large clusters. Drives ~25% of UAE electricity demand reduction strategy.
Conventional split AC has SEER ~3β3.5. District cooling at scale runs at IPLV 0.55β0.65 kW/RT. Aggregating chiller plants enables thermal energy storage to shift load off the 4β6 PM peak, and lets you run nighttime ice/chilled-water storage when grid carbon intensity is lower. So DC isn't just an efficiency play β it's a peak-management and demand-response enabler.
Building rating systems in UAE
- Estidama Pearl Rating System (Abu Dhabi DMT/UPC, mandatory since 2010): 1β5 Pearls; new buildings min 1 Pearl, government 2.
- Al Sa'fat (Dubai Municipality, 2017, mandatory 2020): Bronze (mandatory new builds) β Silver β Gold β Platinum.
- LEED in UAE: world's highest LEED Platinum density per capita; Dubai #2 globally for total LEED-certified projects outside the US. Masdar HQ, Sustainable City, MBR Library, Cleveland Clinic AD, ADNOC HQ all certified.
- WELL + Fitwel + GSAS (Qatar) growing.
- Mostadam (Saudi) β relevant for UAE offices serving KSA clients (NEOM, Diriyah Gate, Red Sea).
Practice Q&A
"Today the UAE has roughly 38β40 GW of installed capacity. Gas remains dominant at around 62%, but Barakah's four 1.4 GW APR-1400 units now contribute 5.6 GW of nuclear baseload β about a quarter of total electricity generation given >90% capacity factor. Utility-scale solar has reached ~6.5 GW, with the 2 GW Al Dhafra plant at $13.20/MWh and the recent Khazna PV1 at $12.88/MWh setting world records.
The national target is 30% clean energy by 2030 β which the country is broadly on track for if you count Barakah, the existing solar fleet, and the 14 GW renewables target β and 50% by 2050, alongside the Net Zero by 2050 strategic initiative announced October 2021. The investment envelope is about AED 600 bn through 2050."
"EWEC issues an Expression of Interest, then a Request for Qualification β typically 8β15 international consortia respond, narrowed to 4β6 qualified bidders. They then bid into a Request for Proposal that fixes technology, site, COD, water output for IWPPs, and PWPA tenor (typically 25β30 years).
Bids are evaluated on the all-in levelised tariff including capacity charge, energy charge, and bonuses/penalties; the lowest tariff usually wins, subject to bankability. The winning consortium forms a project company β typically TAQA + Masdar + a foreign sponsor like EDF, JinkoPower, or Marubeni each with 24β40% β and signs a 25β30-year PWPA with EWEC as single-buyer.
The reason UAE keeps setting world-record tariffs β Noor at $24.20/MWh in 2017, Al Dhafra at $13.20/MWh in 2020, Khazna at $12.88/MWh in 2024 β is the combination of cheap land, sovereign-backed PWPA, USD denomination, low political risk premium, and the 25-year financing tenor."
"Cooling is roughly 70% of UAE summer peak demand, and conventional split AC has a SEER around 3β3.5. District cooling at scale β Empower's ~1.7 m RT, Tabreed's ~1.4 m RT β runs at IPLV 0.55β0.65 kW/RT, which is roughly 35β45% more efficient electricity-per-cooling-tonne than unitary systems.
Aggregating chiller plants also enables thermal energy storage to shift load off the 4β6 PM peak, and lets you run nighttime ice/chilled-water storage when grid carbon intensity is lower. So DC isn't just an efficiency play β it's a peak-management and demand-response enabler that's central to Dubai's 30%-by-2030 demand reduction strategy under Etihad ESCO and the broader DSM 2030 strategy."
Barakah 5.6 GW Β· Al Dhafra 2 GW @ $13.20/MWh Β· Noor AD 1.17 GW Β· MBR target 5 GW by 2030 Β· Khazna PV1 1.5 GW @ $12.88/MWh Β· UAE grid factor ~0.42 tCO2e/MWh Β· Net Zero 2050 Β· 14 GW renewables by 2030 Β· AED 600 bn investment.