Abu Dhabi to begin waste-to-energy bids clarification

1 June 2023

Abu Dhabi-based utility offtaker Emirates Water & Electricity Company (Ewec) and Abu Dhabi Waste Management Company (Tadweer) will undertake clarifications for the proposals received for the contract to develop the emirate's first waste-to-energy (WTE) project starting this month.

Ewec and Tadweer received bids for the contract on 14 April and revealed the bidders on 4 May.

A team comprising Japan's Marubeni Corporation, Switzerland's Hitachi Zosen Inova and Japan Overseas Infrastructure Investment Corporation is understood to have proposed a levelised waste treatment cost of AED175 ($47.6) a metric tonne (MT) as part of the contract to develop the WTE project.

This is equivalent to 45 per cent of the tariff of AED391/MT proposed by the second team, which comprises France's Suez and the local Pal Cooling Holding, according to industry sources.

MEED understands the power tariff for the project is fixed at 11.215 fils ($c3.05) a kilowatt-hour.

Waste treatment is one of the components of the project, which MEED Projects estimates to require an investment of roughly $600m.

The WTE plant will be located near the Al-Dhafra landfill in Abu Dhabi. It will have a processing capacity of 900,000 tonnes of waste a year and generate enough electricity to power up to 52,500 households once complete.

The clients issued the request for proposals (RFP) for the contract in July 2022. The clients completed the site visit with the companies qualified to bid for the contract in September last year, as MEED reported.

The project will involve the financing, construction, operation and maintenance of the WTE plant, which will use advanced moving grate technology to convert municipal solid waste into electricity using a high-efficiency steam turbine generator set.

The plant is expected to reduce carbon dioxide equivalent emissions by up to 1.1 million tonnes a year, equivalent to removing more than 240,000 cars from the road.

The successful developer or developer consortium will own a 40 per cent shareholding in the project's special-purpose vehicle and sign a waste- and power-purchase agreement with Tadweer and Ewec.

The local/Australian Tribe Infrastructure Group is the client's financial adviser, while the UK's Ashurst and Denmark's Ramboll are legal and technical advisers, respectively.

The project aligns with the UAE's aims to divert 75 per cent of waste away from landfills.

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Jennifer Aguinaldo
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