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Mapping MENA’s Renewable Energy Supply Chains: The Emergence of Green Energy Ecosystems in the Middle East and North Africa
Photo by Leonhard Simon/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Mapping MENA’s Renewable Energy Supply Chains: The Emergence of Green Energy Ecosystems in the Middle East and North Africa

    The Middle East and North Africa has the potential to become the world’s largest renewable energy-producing region. Compared to the immense scale of its resources, renewable energy is virtually untapped at present. This study maps the emerging regional trends in renewable energy development and MENA renewable energy supply chains across North Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, and the Levant. The most successful MENA nations in developing their renewable energy resources to date are doing so through the establishment of green energy ecosystems, in which the development of utility-scale renewable energy infrastructure is coordinated with that of robust offtake markets and the establishment of commercially viable storage and transportation mechanisms to service them.

    Renewable Energy and Morocco’s New Green Industries Can Expand Women and Youth Employment through Sustainable Development
    A Moroccan flag flies next to a wind turbine on June 28, 2010, at a wind farm near Tangiers shortly after its inauguration by Moroccan King Mohammed VI. Photo by ABDELHAK SENNA/AFP via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • Renewable Energy and Morocco’s New Green Industries Can Expand Women and Youth Employment through Sustainable Development

    Morocco is a regional leader in renewable energy development. The country’s success stems from its multi-faceted green energy ecosystem that is giving rise to international renewable energy export supply chains based on production of green hydrogen, in the form of green am-monia, as well as phosphates, other minerals and metals, fertilizers, agri-food products, and electric vehicles. As rising green industrial manufacturing and green agricultural production are becoming drivers of long-term, private sector employment, a synergy is emerging between Mo-rocco’s efforts to expand its already significant renewable energy sector and its objective of in-creasing the number of women and young people engaged in formal employment.

    MENA’s Emergence as a Hub for Renewable Energy Supply Chains
    Main photo: Aluminium from Dubai produced using solar energy at the opening of a new electric car motor housing production line at the BMW Landshut factory on October 25, 2024 in Ergolding, Germany. Photo by Leonhard Simon/Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • MENA’s Emergence as a Hub for Renewable Energy Supply Chains

    Within the next 25 years, the Middle East and North Africa will be a global leader in renewable energy production and a hub for international renewable energy supply chains. Morocco, the UAE, and Jordan are spearheading the regional trend to develop green energy ecosystems in which renewable energy is used, in part or entirely, to power the manufacture of intermediate and finished goods for export.

    Accelerating Solar Power Deployment in the Arab Gulf States
    Photo by Christopher Pike/ Bloomberg via Getty Images.
  • Analysis
  • Accelerating Solar Power Deployment in the Arab Gulf States

    There is currently a discrepancy between the strategic objectives and enabling conditions for solar power in the Gulf and the level of actual deployment. Despite the region’s considerable promise as a potential global leaders in solar power, including one of the world’s highest levels of solar irradiance and strong supporting operating conditions, renewable power accounted for only 2% of generation capacity in 2022.

    Solar Power in the Gulf: Leaders and Laggards in Regulatory Support for Solar Power Deployment
    Photographer: Christopher Pike/Bloomberg
  • Analysis
  • Solar Power in the Gulf: Leaders and Laggards in Regulatory Support for Solar Power Deployment

    The hydrocarbon-rich Gulf states are located in the heart of the global sunbelt, endowing them with some of the greatest solar resources in the world. Peak load hours in these countries also align well with daily and seasonal solar radiation levels. Nevertheless, actual deployment of renewable power, including solar, is among the lowest in the world, even though output has increased significantly over the past five years. This paper analyzes why solar power has seen some success in a few states, while in others there has been little momentum.

    The Outlook for Energy Demand Growth in the Middle East and North Africa: Regional Supply as a Critical Driver of Demand
    Photo by Christopher Pike/Bloomberg via Getty Images
  • Report
  • The Outlook for Energy Demand Growth in the Middle East and North Africa: Regional Supply as a Critical Driver of Demand

    The Middle East and North Africa is typically viewed from afar as a region of major energy exporters rather than consumers. Consumption patterns vary significantly within the region itself, but a variety of factors warrant giving its energy demand much closer attention than it generally receives on an international level. The range of factors that will determine the changes in demand from every country in the region, each with their respective intricacies, are far too numerous to examine in the space of this study. However, many of the key drivers that are expected to have a broad impact on shaping the evolution of regional demand to the end of the current decade deserve critical review.

    The Outlook for Energy Demand Growth in the MENA Region
    Photo by Christopher Pike/Bloomberg via Getty Images.
  • Report
  • The Outlook for Energy Demand Growth in the MENA Region

    The MENA region is set to experience substantial growth in demand for energy during the remaining years of the present decade. Factors driving this growth vary enormously by sub-region and individual country, but there are broad similarities in the forms of both primary and final energy demand growth that are expected to materialize by 2030.

    Weekly Briefing: A cease-fire for Thanksgiving?
  • Commentary
  • Weekly Briefing: A cease-fire for Thanksgiving?

    Read MEI’s weekly briefing featuring expert analysis of key regional developments for the week ahead.

    November 26, 2024

    The Role of the Middle East in the US-China Race to AI Supremacy
    Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Role of the Middle East in the US-China Race to AI Supremacy

    AI is a pivotal catalyst for global innovation, with the United States at the forefront of the development of this transformative technology amid its ongoing great power rivalry with China. This report aims to define the concept of AI supremacy and to revise the US’ AI strategy in accordance with a more comprehensive understanding of it. The report also looks at how the competition has affected actors from the Middle East, namely the UAE and Saudi Arabia, attempting to steer the conversation on the global AI race toward a comprehensive conception of AI supremacy that is anchored in the realities of international affairs and US-China great power competition.

    Steven A. Cook | 'Taking the Edge Off the Middle East' Ep. 5
  • Podcast
  • Steven A. Cook | 'Taking the Edge Off the Middle East' Ep. 5

    Middle East Focus Presents: ’Taking the Edge Off the Middle East’ with Brian Katulis.

    A series of casual conversations with leading policy professionals on the most important happenings in the Middle East today – hosted by MEI’s Senior Fellow for US Foreign Policy Brian Katulis.

    Steven A. Cook, Senior Fellow for Middle East and Africa Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, sits down with Brian to discuss his latest book “The End of Ambition,” their policy outlook with the incoming Trump Administration, and deteriorating discourse in Washington policy circles. 

    Tehran’s calculations to avoid all-out war with Israel and the US
    Photo by ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Tehran’s calculations to avoid all-out war with Israel and the US

    Under past reformist presidents, Iran repeatedly tried to build a grand bargain deal with the United States, entailing compromises over its nuclear program in return for negotiating spheres of influence across the Middle East. This September, speaking on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly meetings in New York, the current reformist president Masoud Pezeshkian confirmed that he was open to direct talks with Washington to end hostilities.

    November 12, 2024

    The Middle East’s changing strategic landscape
    Photo by Uriel Sinai/Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Middle East’s changing strategic landscape

    The multiple wars that have erupted since Oct. 7, 2023, have already changed the strategic landscape in the Middle East — and more change is likely to follow.

    November 7, 2024

    How Donald Trump might tackle the Middle East in 2025
    Photo by Brendan Gutenschwager/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • How Donald Trump might tackle the Middle East in 2025

    it is possible to extrapolate how the incoming second Trump administration may respond to the complex situation in the Middle East by examining the president-elect’s record during his first term, what he has said since, as well as public statements of his running-mate, Sen. J. D. Vance. Two main issues are likely to dominate Donald Trump’s regional agenda when he comes to power: Iran and Israeli-Palestinian affairs.

    Inside Damascus’s Reconstruction Lab: Navigating the Framework of Return and Recovery
    Photo by Louai Beshara / AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Inside Damascus’s Reconstruction Lab: Navigating the Framework of Return and Recovery

    Since the end of the civil war in Syria, government officials have inaugurated high-end tourist projects and upscale urban housing schemes, while at the same time preventing Syrian refugees and internally displaced persons from returning to their ruined neighborhoods or rebuilding their demolished homes. The focus on luxury housing in a country devastated by conflict and within a city suffering from massive destruction and housing shortages encapsulates the contradictions of the regime’s policy for reconstruction and early recovery not only in Damascus but in the whole country.