Watch: World Bank on concentrated solar power jobs boom

With nearly 10 million people working in renewables worldwide, Morocco - and soon Dubai - add thousands of jobs thanks to solar power that can be used at night.

Morocco’s Noor 3 concentrated solar power plant. LeAnne Graves / The National
Powered by automated translation

With nearly 10 million people working in renewables worldwide, Morocco - and soon Dubai - add thousands of jobs thanks to solar power that can be used at night.

Concentrated solar power (CSP) has the ability to store energy to use when the sun isn’t shining. Morocco leads the region with its Ouarzazate solar complex, which will employee more than 1 million people upon completion next year.

The first three phases, totaling 510MW, are CSP.

This is the same technology that will be used in the fourth phase of the Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park, which recently set a new world benchmark: night time solar power at 7.3 US cents per kilowatt hour.

Couple this with the low prices of solar photovoltaic, and this could introduce around the clock solar power at prices competing with fossil fuels.

Read more:

Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid announces winning contract for world's largest CSP solar project

‘Near-pefect’ solar absorber highlights bright outlook for UAE’s sun-powered future

Dewa first in region to receive International Renewable Energy Certificates

Renewables are growing, but at a risk, Moody’s says