Syria signs deal with Acwa Power for 2.5GW renewables

4 September 2025

Syria’s Ministry of Energy and Acwa Power have signed a joint development agreement (JDA) to study and develop about 2.5GW of renewable energy capacity in Syria.

The deal covers solar, wind, energy storage and a proposed national technical training centre.

Under the agreement, Acwa Power will work with the ministry to identify suitable sites for approximately 1GW of photovoltaic capacity and 1.5GW of wind capacity.

The company will also evaluate potential grid-scale storage solutions to enhance system reliability and flexibility.

The JDA establishes a framework to conduct detailed technical and commercial studies on existing power plants and the national grid. It will also assess, develop and implement a pipeline of power projects in Syria.

The agreement was signed at the Ministry of Energy headquarters in Damascus, in the presence of Mohammad Al-Bashir, minister of energy, Mohammad Abunayyan, founder and chairman of Acwa Power, and representatives from the Saudi Ministry of Energy.

The JDA between the Ministry of Energy and Acwa Power comes amid a flurry of deals aimed at rebuilding Syria’s energy sector.

In May, the ministry signed a $7bn memorandum of understanding (MoU) with a Qatar-led consortium to develop 5GW of gas and solar capacity, including four combined-cycle gas turbine plants and a 1GW solar project, which is expected to double the country’s power output.

Syria also recently awarded a contract for a 100MW solar plant in Hama to a Syrian-Turkish consortium, further signalling the government’s push to restore electricity supply through renewable energy.

Meanwhile, the easing of Western sanctions has facilitated energy sector investment, exemplified by Syria’s first crude oil shipment in 14 years and recent MoUs with Saudi and Gulf-based companies to rehabilitate oil and power infrastructure.


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Mark Dowdall
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