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Posts Tagged ‘Abu Dhabi’

Sheikh it up, baby!

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

“You’ve got one of the oil capitals of the world taking a strong interest in renewable energy,” Tony Blair said. “It’s quite impressive to see.”

Yes, it’s impressive. Blair, the former British prime minister, held a brief news conference before delivering the closing speech at the World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi. Like most of the speakers at the event, which brought 15,000 people to this oil-rich emirate on the Persian Gulf, he called for global regulation of greenhouse gases, investments in solar and wind power and international cooperation to share technology with poor nations.

“It is right now,” Blair said, “at the instant when our thoughts are centered on the economic challenge, that we must not set to one side the challenge of global warming, but instead resolve to meet it and put the world on path to a sustainable future.”

Abu Dhabi’s heading down the path, in a hurry. By now, if you’ve paid any attention (or if you read this front-page story in The Times last week), you’ve heard about the zero-carbon, zero-waste, powered-by-solar Masdar City, which is being built outside of downtown Abu Dhabi.

But did you know that the city will also include the world’s biggest and most sophisticated PRT (personalized rapid transit) system, computer-driven vehicles that will take people exactly where they want to go, nonstop? Here’s what the PRT vehicles will look like:

And did you know that the Masdar Initiative, the parent company for Abu Dhabi’s alternative energy ventures, is going to build what could be the world’s largest carbon-capture and storage operation?

And did you know that Masdar is building a solar panel manufacturing plant in Germany, which will then be duplicated in Abu Dhabi, and quite likely after that in the U.S.?

And did you know that Abu Dhabi also has plans to build as many as 10 nuclear power plants?

Now that’s Beyond Petroleum.

The cost of all this is a cool $22 billion, although the Masdar Iniative, as a for-profit entity, hope to make money back by renting out offices and homes in the city, selling energy to the rest of the Middle East and investing in clean energy businesses. Masdar, for instance, is an investor in Solyndra, a fast-growing solar PV company based in Fremont, Ca., with more than $1.5 billion in orders.

What Abu Dhabi is doing is uncommon in business. Rarely does a company (or, in this case, a country) that is thriving in one industry set out to become a leader in a competing business. Usually companies, or entire industries, are too busy protecting themselves against competition. Think about how the newspaper industry and the music industry missed opportunities on the Internet; if they had been willing to disrupt themselves, some classified ad guy would have started Ebay and craigslist and some music promoter would have invented iTunes.

Certainly Abu Dhabi doesn’t need to expand its operations.  The average net worth for Abu Dhabi’s 420,000 citizens is US$ 17 million, which is why most of the work in the city is done by expatriates from south Asia, Africa and the rest of the Middle East. Nevertheless, the ruling family has decided to use its wealth to diversify, and anticipate the changes to come.

As Masdar CEO Sultan Al-Jaber put it: “The world has reached a tipping point in the acceptance of renewable energy.”

I can’t really tell you why the country has set out in this new direction. When I asked Masdar people, I was essentially told that this was due to the sagacity of the royal family, and specifically to the wisdom of the overseer of Masdar, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the armed forces. The Sheikh doesn’t do interviews, so I couldn’t ask him directly about his thinking. (Disclosure: The Crown Prince paid for my trip to Abu Dhabi.)

I can tell you that the Sheikh has several things going for him that American CEOs don’t. He doesn’t have to worry about quarterly earnings, so he can invest for the long term. He doesn’t have to answer to shareholders. He doesn’t have to get elected. And no one will tell him publicly that he’s crazy to be spending money on solar power and green buildings because he can’t be criticized in the press.

I also can’t tell you whether the Masdar Initiative will succeed in its many ventures. But I can say that I don’t know of any company, or any country, that is doing more to lead the world to a low-carbon economy.

Abu Dhabi’s amazing clean energy bet

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

Strange, isn’t it, that the biggest, most ambitious, most expensive clean energy project in the world, a zero-carbon, zero-waste new city called Masdar City, is going up in the oil-rich Abu Dhabi? Then again, maybe it’s not so strange.

There are good reasons why the royal family that runs Abu Dhabi, the largest of the seven emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates, and home to an estimated 9.2% (!) of the world’s proven oil reserves, is so committed to solar energy, zero waste, super-efficient buildings, sustainable materials, personalized electric transport and other clean tech innovations:

1. They know that energy is the biggest business in the world.
2. They know oil supplies are limited.
3. They understand the threat of climate change.
4. They have more money than they can spend.
5. And they run the country without opposition, so if they want to get something bold and risky done, like building a new city for 50,000 people, they get it done. There are no NIMBY (not-in-my-backyard) problems at Masdar, although that’s also because there are no backyards anywhere near Masdar. It’s being built in a desert, outside the city of Abu Dhabi.

I’ve been reading and writing about Masdar for a year or so, and today I finally had a chance to see it. This week, I’m visiting Abu Dhabi for the World Future Energy Summit, a meeting of about 15,000 people to discuss clean energy. The conference is attracting business people and political leaders from around the world. (Speakers include Tony Blair, Lord Nicholas Stern, Nobel prize winner Dr. Rajendra Pachauri and Susan Hockfield, the president of MIT.) Disclosure: The Masdar Iniative, the parent company of Masdar City, paid my expenses to attend.

Today, Masdar took about 50 reporters on a tour of Masdar City, which is still in its early stages. Currently under construction are a headquarters building, and a couple of buildings that will be part of the Masdar Institute, a research-oriented graduate school being developed in cooperation with MIT. The institute is expected to open later this year, with about 250 faculty and staff and about 150 students. Because Masdar wants to attract top students from around the world, those admitted will get free tuition. There’s lots more about the city at the Masdar website.

The most impressive thing we saw today was a solar energy power plant, consisting of an array of solar photovoltaic panels, spread across a 55-acre site. When construction is completed in March, the solar facility will have 87,777 panels and be able to generate 10 megawatts of electricity—making it the largest solar power plant in the Middle East and North Africa. That’s still not very big. By comparison, a typical coal plant can generate about 700 megawatts.

The solar plant is being designed and built by an Abu Dhabi-based startup called Enviromena Power Systems, whose CEO, Sami Khoreibi, told me that he started the company explicitly to take advantage of opportunities being created by Masdar. “We hope to use this project as a launching pad,” Khoreibi said, noting that the abundant sunshine in the Middle East make it a perfect site for solar power. The 10Mw plant cost about 185 million dirhams, the local currency, or about $50 million dollars.

Interestingly, Masdar has been conducting field tests since 2007 of solar photovoltaic panels—33 systems from 15 countries. The purpose is to measure their performance against cost under challenging, real-world conditions. (Summers here feature sweltering heat.) “We’re testing and constantly analyzing the data, and using it for our procurement process,” said Dr. Samir Tabu Zaid, a Masdar executive who responsible for solar. Here he is, snapped with my iPhone:

The test results won’t be made public, Zaid said, because some companies that supplied panels did not want to be measured against their peers. He wouldn’t even say which companies were competing, although he said they come from the U.S. China, Japan, Taiwan, Spanish and Germany, among other places.

But we know that two companies did very well because their panels were chosen for the first 10MW solar plant. One is Suntech, the big Chinese company that makes conventional silicon crystalline solar panels, and the other is First Solar, a U.S. manufacturer that makes thin film solar in, among other places, Toledo, Ohio. The Walton family of Wal-Mart fame were among the early investors in First Solar. Each is supplying 5 MW of solar. Eventually, solar photovoltaic power is expected to deliver about 80% of the electricity to Masdar. The city will need 200 to 250 MW.

First Solar isn’t the only U.S. company that wants to profit from Masdar. Applied Materials, of Santa Clara, CA, is supplying machinery for a solar PV manufacturing plant that Masdar is building in Germany. CH2MHill, the Colorado-based U.S. construction and engineering firm, is project manager for Masdar City. CH2MHill’s CEO, Ralph Peterson, is speaking here. (He’s also agreed to speak at FORTUNE’s Brainstorm Green conference.)

A big question: Will the Masdar Initiative make money, and, if so, how? If the city is a success, it will attract businesses and other tenants, but the upfront costs – an estimated $22 billion – don’t justify Masdar purely as a real estate development. Longer term, the hope of Abu Dhabi and Masdar is to invent, develop and export clean technology. As Khaled Awad, director of property development at Masdar, put it today: “This city is supposed to be a destination for innovation.” Query why this can’t be happening in Silicon Valley or Washington, D.C., but in a flat world, we’ll all benefit from the work unfolding here.

Green power player

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Who’s the most powerful person in the world of green business?

It might be Jeff Immelt, ceo of General Electric, with its far-reaching eco-magination iniative. It might be Lee Scott, ceo of Wal-Mart, which is greening the world of consumer products. You could make an argument for John Doerr of Kleiner Perkins who with his pal and partner Al Gore aim to make Kleiner the leading venture capital firm for clean energy. Others have clout, too—Washington politicians, the leaders of the big environmental groups, pundit Tom Friedman of The Times.

But the most powerful of all might turn out to be someone whose name you probably don’t know: Sultan Ahmed Al-Jaber.

Al-Jaber is chief executive of the Abu Dhabi Future Energy Company (ADFEC), which was created by the government of Abu Dhabi to lead the Masdar Initiative. You’ve probably heard about the new city of Masdar, which is being designed and built as a zero-emissions, zero-waste, automobile-free city in Abu Dhabi. I wrote a column about Masdar city in March.

But there’s a lot more going on at Masdar than the new city, as I learned when I had a chance to sit down with Sultan—that’s his first name (he isn’t a sultan), and that’s how he wanted me to address him, so I will do so here. .

Sultan was in Washington this week to testify before Congress about clean energy, met with Masdar partners and generally spread the word about the $15 billion—yes, billion—initiative, which is moving along at a brisk clip.

Here’s what he said about Masdar City before a congressional committee:

For the first time in history, more than half of the world’s population now lives in cities, with their traditional energy inefficiencies, waste and pollution. We must fundamentally re-think how cities can conserve energy and other resources. We must heavily employ new technologies and even create new urban models, as we are doing in Masdar City.

Here are some things I learned about Sultan in our conversation: He is 34. He earned a degree in chemical engineering and an MBA from USC, after starting college in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and then a stint at the Colorado School of Mines. (He evidently preferred the southern California sunshine.) He owns a couple of two-wheel Segway vehicles to get around. (Masdar is an investor in Segway.) And he is really excited about marshalling the money, the will, the brainpower and the commitment of the leaders of Abu Dhabi to drive the global adoption of clean energy.

“I don’t want to sound arrogant,” Sultan told me, “but the truth is, we are creating history. We’re very passionate about it.”

He said the Masdar initiative has four broad goals—to diversify the Abu Dhabi economy which now depends heavily on oil and gas, to turn Abu Dhabi into an exporter of technology and knowledge (which it now mostly imports), to develop the human capital in the emirate and to maintain leadership in what he called the “post-fossil fuel era” (his phrase, not mine).

The city is the centerpiece of the effort, but just as important is the university that Masdar is developing in cooperation with MIT. It will be open only to graduate students, who will have to meet MIT admission standards. They won’t have to pay tuition. They’ll also have the chance to test out their ideas and technology in the new city. Presumably, the best ideas can get funded by ADFEC.

“Masdar City is not a real estate play,” Sultan said. “It has much more to offer. It is beiong modeled after Silicon Valley.”

Besides the city and the university, Masdar has a $250 million venture capital fund that has made investments in other VC funds as well as direct investments in clean technology startups. (Here’s the portfolio.) Other investors in the fund include Credit Suisse and Siemens.

Last month, Masdar said it will invest up to $2 billion to build its own own thin-film solar company. The first plant will be constructed in Germany because demand for solar panels is robust in Europe; then a copycat plant will be built in Abu Dhabi, the first solar-energy manufacturing plant in the Persian Gulf. A third plant may be built in the U.S. Applied Materials of Santa Clara, Ca., will supply the equipment

Other companies working on projects with Masdar include GE, which is developing wind power in Masdar, and British Petroleum and Rio Tinto, which are working on a hydrogen power plant. Masdar has also created what it calls the Zayed Future Energy Prize, with an annual prize pool of $2.3 million, to reward achievements in energy innovation. The first winner will be announced in 2009.

Sitting in Washington, discussing all this with Sultan, I was struck by the fact that, when it comes to energy, Abu Dhabi has a clearer sense of where it wants to go and how it wants to get there than either the Bush administration or the Congress. Of course, it’s easier to develop a coherent policy and to get things done in a tiny, wealthy nation governed by a royal family with a strong sense of purpose.

As Sultan put it: “Either we can be leaders or we can be followers. We want to lead the way. And the time for action is now.”