The Desertec proposal aims to turn desert sunlight - plentyful in Africa and the MIddle East - into electricity for Europe, where sunlight is less dependable.
Credit: Desertec Foundation
MUNICH: Twelve European companies launched a multi-billion dollar initiative to instal large-scale solar farms in Africa and the Middle East to produce energy for Europe.
The consortium says the massive 400 billion euro (US$560 billion) proposal could provide up to 15 per cent of Europe's electricity needs by 2050. Engineering giants ABB and Siemens, energy groups E.ON and RWE and financial institutions Deutsche Bank and Munich Re are among the companies which signed a protocol in Munich.
"Today we have taken a step forward" towards the project's realisation, said Nikolaus von Bomhard, head of the reinsurance giant Munich Re, which hosted the signing.
Known as the Desertec Industrial Initiative would build solar-power generators from Morocco to Saudi Arabia and pump electricity to Europe via undesea cables.
It would also provide a "substantial portion of the power needs of the producer countries," the Desertec foundation said in a statement, and transform sea water into drinking and irrigation water for local populations.
Munich Re board member Torsten Jeworrek said the European companies involved had pledged to work "as equals in a sincere and fair" manner with producer countries.
For Jordan's Prince Hassan ibn Talal, "The partnerships that will be formed across the regions as a result of the Desertec project will open a new chapter in relations between the people of the European Union, West Asia and North Africa."
Many details still have to be worked out however, including where to install the plants, when the power would come on and how much it would cost, potential profits, political stability in some areas and of course, financing.
Renewable energy analyst Sebastaian Zank at West LB bank, which is not involved in the project, said it might succeed but only "in the very, very long term."
He added: "As long as there are no transmission networks between these two continents this is more or less a nice future fantasy."
Under the protocol, a Desertec study office to be established by October 2009 will have three years to elaborate plans to create the network of solar farms and transmission networks and find the funds.
Representatives of the Arab League and the Egyptian energy ministry also attended the protocol's signing.
Other companies invoved are the Spanish firm ABENGOA Solar and the Algerian conglomerate Cevital along with several German banks and engineering companies.
The Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper said in June that electricity could begin flowing to Europe within 10 years.
West LB analyst Zank said some plants were already being developed in North Africa and "one can say that solar thermal energy will already be produced next year, but not with the intention of exporting this electricity to Europe."
Undersea networks could be built quickly, he added, but "at the moment the costs are so high it is not economically viable."
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and European Commission president Jose Manuel Barroso have hailed the initiative however, while others have voiced criticism. German Social Democratic deputy Hermann Scheer said it was not necessary to go to North Africa to collect the Sun's rays, and added: "We could invest the 400 billion euros here" in the recession-hit Eurozone.
He also preferred a network of decentralised operators that produced renewable energy from many sources rather than having one key project in the hands of major corporations.
Others doubt producer countries would fully benefit from a plan designed with Europe in mind, leading the business daily Handelsblatt to warn of potential "eco-colonialism".
