EBRD to help fund transition from gas to wind power in Egypt
						
		 
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		 [September 12, 2022]  By 
		Aidan Lewis 
		 
		CAIRO (Reuters) - The European Bank for 
		Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) will help finance the 
		decommissioning of 5GW of inefficient gas-fired power plants in Egypt 
		from 2023 while pledging up to $1 billion for renewables, its regional 
		director said on Sunday.  
		 
		EBRD would raise up to $300 million in sovereign financing for projects 
		including work to stabilise Egypt's grid, adding battery storage, 
		developing the local supply chain for renewables, and retraining 
		workers, said Heike Harmgart, EBRD's managing director for the Southern 
		and Eastern Mediterranean. 
		 
		A separate $1 billion pledged for renewables would be about one tenth of 
		the private funding needed for 10GW of mainly wind-powered projects 
		planned by the government by 2028, she added.  
						
		
		  
						
		Egypt is a natural gas producer that is trying to cut down on domestic 
		consumption so that it can export more to Europe at a time of high 
		prices and demand resulting from Russia's invasion of Ukraine. 
		 
		It has a power surplus after installing three huge gas-fired power 
		plants built by Siemens from 2015.  
		 
		The government is hoping gas exports can help contain pressure on 
		Egypt's currency after the Ukraine war triggered the latest dip in 
		dollar inflows from portfolio investment and tourism. 
		 
		
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			The headquarter of the European Bank for Reconstruction and 
			Development (EBRD) is seen in London, Britain, November 22, Britain 
			2016. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth 
            
			
			  
		The role of gas is set to be an issue of dispute at the COP27 climate 
		summit in Egypt in November.  
		 
		Climate activists say there should a rapid transition away from gas. As 
		host of COP27, Egypt is giving a voice to some African states that want 
		to continue using gas as a transition fuel to develop their economies.
		 
		 
		About 3GW of the planned 10GW of new renewable power would be made 
		available for a pilot phase in the production of green hydrogen in 
		Egypt's Red Sea port of Ain Sokhna, Harmgart said. 
		 
		Some would go to replacing capacity lost through the decommissioning of 
		the thermal power plants.  
		 
		Egypt has announced a string of memoranda of understanding for green 
		hydrogen and ammonia projects at Ain Sokhna.  
		 
		(Editing by Alexander Smith) 
				 
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