Abu Dhabi extends battery storage bid deadline
14 March 2025

Prequalified bidders have been given a three-week extension to submit their proposals for a contract to develop and operate a battery energy storage system (bess) plant project in Abu Dhabi.
The project client, Abu Dhabi-based utility offtaker Emirates Water & Electricity Company (Ewec), expects to receive bids by 24 March, three weeks later than the previous tender closing date, according to a source familiar with the project.
Called Bess 1, the 400MW project will closely follow the model of Abu Dhabi’s independent power project (IPP) programme, in which developers enter into a long-term energy storage agreement (ESA) with Ewec as the sole procurer.
The first plant will be in Al-Bihouth, about 45 kilometres (km) southwest of Abu Dhabi, and the second plant will be in Madinat Zayed, about 160km southwest of the city.
Ewec issued the request for proposals to prequalified companies in July last year and initially set 30 November 2024 as the last day to submit proposals.
MEED previously reported that up to four consortiums comprising infrastructure investors, developers and contractors have been formed and are preparing to submit their proposals for the contract.
Ewec prequalified 11 managing partners that can bid either individually or as part of a consortium with other prequalified bidders. These are:
- Acwa Power (Saudi Arabia)
- China Electrical Equipment International (China)
- EDF (France)
- International Power (Engie)
- Jera (Japan)
- Jinko Power (China)
- Korea Electric Power Corporation (Kepco, South Korea)
- Marubeni (Japan)
- Sembcorp Utilities (Singapore)
- SPIC Huanghe Hydropower Development Company (China)
- Sumitomo Corporation (Japan)
Ewec prequalified 18 other companies that can bid as part of a consortium. These are:
- Abrdn Investcorp Infrastructure Investments Manager (UK)
- AGP Capital (US)
- Al-Masaood (UAE)
- Al-Fanar Company (Saudi Arabia)
- Alghanim International (Kuwait)
- Aljomaih Energy & Water Company (Jenwa, Saudi Arabia)
- Amplex-Emirates (local)
- ATGC Transport & General Trading (local)
- Amea Power (local)
- China Electric Power Equipment & Technology (China)
- China Machinery Engineering Corporation (China)
- GE Capital EFS Financing (US)
- Itochu (Japan)
- Korea Western Power Company (Kowepo, South Korea)
- Pacific Green (US)
- Samsung C&T (South Korea)
- Swift Energy (Malaysia)
- X-Noor Energy Equipment Trading (UAE)
The planned facility is expected to provide up to 800 megawatt-hours (MWh) of storage capacity.
The ESA will be for 15 years, commencing on the project’s commercial operation date, which falls in the third quarter of 2026.
According to Ewec, the bess project will provide additional flexibility to the system and ancillary services such as frequency response and voltage regulation.
Global bess market
The overall capacity of deployed bess globally is expected to reach 127GW by 2027, up from an estimated cumulative deployment of 36.7GW at the end of 2023, according to a recent GlobalData report.
The report named Chinese companies BYD and CATL and South Korean companies LG Energy Solutions and Samsung SDI among the top battery technology providers globally.
READ THE MARCH MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – clck here to view PDF
Chinese contractors win record market share; Cairo grapples with political and fiscal challenges; Stronger upstream project spending beckons in 2025
Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the March 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:
|
> AGENDA 1: Chinese firms dominate region’s projects market
> AGENDA 2: China construction at pivotal juncture
> UPSTREAM 1: Offshore oil and gas sees steady capex
> UPSTREAM 2: Saudi Arabia to retain upstream dominance
> DIRIYAH: Diriyah CEO sets the record straight
> SAUDI POWER: Saudi power projects hit record high
> AUTOMOTIVE: Saudi Arabia gears up to lead Gulf’s automotive sector
> EGYPT: Egypt battles structural issues
> GULF PROJECTS INDEX: Gulf hits six-month growth streak
> CONTRACT AWARDS: High-value deals signed in power and industrial sectors
> ECONOMIC DATA: Data drives regional projects
|
Exclusive from Meed
-
Dubai tenders Warsan waste-to-energy consultancy contract16 February 2026
-
Saudi Arabia wastewater plant reaches financial close16 February 2026
-
Riyadh tenders Expo 2030 site offices contract16 February 2026
-
Acwa refinances $2.45bn Hassyan IPP debt16 February 2026
-
SWPC rebrands as Sharakat to reinforce PPP focus13 February 2026
All of this is only 1% of what MEED.com has to offer
Subscribe now and unlock all the 153,671 articles on MEED.com
- All the latest news, data, and market intelligence across MENA at your fingerprints
- First-hand updates and inside information on projects, clients and competitors that matter to you
- 20 years' archive of information, data, and news for you to access at your convenience
- Strategize to succeed and minimise risks with timely analysis of current and future market trends
Related Articles
-
Dubai tenders Warsan waste-to-energy consultancy contract16 February 2026
Dubai Municipality has issued a tender for consultancy services on the second phase of the Warsan waste-to-energy (WTE) plant.
The tender covers feasibility, procurement and construction supervision services for the project.
The bid submission deadline is 25 February.
The project relates to the planned expansion of the Warsan WTE plant in Dubai. The scheme has an estimated budget of $500m.
The facility will be located in Warsan 2, next to the Al-Aweer sewage treatment plant. As MEED understands, it will use treated wastewater from that facility.
The project scope includes construction of treatment lines, a boiler hall, waste bunkers, a flue gas treatment system, a main electrical station and associated infrastructure.
The contract duration is six years
Expansion strategy
The original Warsan WTE plant, Dubai’s first major WTE public-private partnership (PPP) project, reached full commercial operations in 2024.
Located in the Warsan area, the AED4bn ($1.1bn) facility treats 1.9 million tonnes of municipal solid waste annually, generating up to 220MW of thermal energy that is fed into the local grid.
In February 2023, state utility Dubai Electricity & Water Authority (Dewa) and Dubai Waste Management Company signed the power-purchase agreement (PPA) for the project.
Dubai Waste Management Company, the special-purpose vehicle implementing the scheme, reached financial close in June 2021 for the project.
The main contractor was a consortium of Belgium’s Besix Group and Hitachi Zosen Inova of Switzerland.
The expansion aligns with Dubai’s long-term waste strategy. In February 2022, the emirate approved a AED74.5bn budget covering waste management initiatives from 2021 to 2041.
The strategy promotes innovation in waste management, recycling and energy conservation. It anticipates private sector contributions of AED70.5bn, equivalent to about 95% of the total planned investment.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15660272/main.jpg -
Saudi Arabia wastewater plant reaches financial close16 February 2026

The planned $500m industrial wastewater treatment plant (IWWTP) in Jubail in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province has reached financial close, sources have confirmed to MEED.
Located in Jubail Second Industrial City, the facility will treat and recycle wastewater from Satorp’s under-construction Amiral chemical derivatives complex, also in Jubail.
The project reached financial close after hedging arrangements were completed on 12 February, sources said.
A consortium of Saudi utilities provider Marafiq, the regional business of France’s Veolia and Bahrain/Saudi Arabia-based Lamar Holding is developing the project under a 30-year concession agreement.
Saudi Aramco Total Refining & Petrochemical Company (Satorp), a joint venture of Saudi Aramco and France’s TotalEnergies, awarded the contract last September.
As MEED exclusively reported, Egypt’s Orascom Construction is the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractor for the project, which is expected to be commissioned in 2028.
Marafiq, formally Power & Water Utility Company for Jubail and Yanbu, will own a 40% stake in the dedicated project company. Veolia Middle East will hold a 35% stake, and Lamar Holding’s Lamar Arabia for Energy will hold the other 25%.
The planned IWWTP, which will primarily serve the $11bn sprawling Amiral chemicals zone, will implement advanced water treatment and recovery technologies to process complex industrial effluents, including spent caustic streams. Treated water will be reintegrated into the industrial processes, supporting closed-loop reuse and energy efficiency.
As of February, more than 50% of construction on Satorp’s Amiral facility has been completed. Commissioning is targeted for the end of 2027.
Construction is also ongoing on a separate industrial wastewater treatment plant (IWTP8) in Jubail. Saudi Services for Electro Mechanic Works is the contractor for the development’s fourth expansion phase.
The Marafiq-owned project is scheduled to be completed by the end of the quarter.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15660112/main.jpg -
Riyadh tenders Expo 2030 site offices contract16 February 2026

Saudi Arabia’s Expo 2030 Riyadh Company (ERC), tasked with delivering the Expo 2030 Riyadh venue, has tendered a contract that includes the construction of site offices required for the initial construction works.
MEED understands that the package was retendered in early February, with a bid submission deadline of 26 February.
The contract was first tendered in May last year, with bids submitted in July, as MEED reported.
The tendering activity follows the Royal Commission for Riyadh City (RCRC) issuing a design-and-build tender for the construction of a new metro station serving the Expo 2030 site.
The new metro station will be located on Line 4 (Yellow Line) of the Riyadh Metro network.
MEED understands that the tender was floated in early February, with a bid submission deadline of 3 May.
Construction work on the Expo 2030 Riyadh site is progressing at an accelerated pace. In January, ERC awarded an estimated SR1bn ($267m) contract to deliver the initial infrastructure works at the site.
The contract was awarded to the local firm Nesma & Partners.
The scope of work covers about 50 kilometres (km) of integrated infrastructure networks, including internal roads and essential utilities such as water, sewage, electrical and communication systems, and electric vehicle charging stations.
Contractors are also bidding for infrastructure lots two and three. In December, MEED reported that ERC had floated another tender for the project’s initial infrastructure works.
The masterplan encompasses an area of 6 square kilometres, making it one of the largest sites designated for a World Expo event. Situated to the north of the Saudi capital, the site will be located near the future King Salman International airport, providing direct access to various landmarks within Riyadh.
Countries participating in Expo 2030 Riyadh will have the option to construct permanent pavilions. This initiative is expected to create opportunities for business and investment growth in the region.
The expo is forecast to attract more than 40 million visitors.
In a statement, the Public Investment Fund said: “During its construction phases, Expo 2030 Riyadh and its legacy are projected to contribute around $64bn to Saudi GDP and generate approximately 171,000 direct and indirect jobs. Once operational, it is expected to contribute approximately $5.6bn to GDP.”
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15659580/main.jpg -
Acwa refinances $2.45bn Hassyan IPP debt16 February 2026
Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
Saudi Arabia’s Acwa has announced it has refinanced the existing debt facilities of the Hassyan independent power project (IPP) in Dubai.
In a post on social media platform LinkedIn, the developer said the transaction is the largest refinancing it has completed, valued at $2.45bn.
It added that the deal is backed by a new group of lenders. These lenders have yet to be disclosed.
The Hassyan IPP has a generation capacity of 2,400MW and reached full commercial operations in 2023.
The project was originally developed as a coal-fired IPP. It was later converted to operate on natural gas instead, reflecting changes in Dubai’s power generation strategy.
A consortium comprising Acwa – formerly Acwa Power – and China’s Harbin Electric won the contract to develop the project in 2016.
Acwa and Harbin Electric hold 26.95% and 14.7% stakes, respectively, in the project company Hassyan Energy Company. Dubai Electricity & Water Authority (Dewa) holds 51%, while Silk Road Fund owns 7.35%.
The Hassyan plant forms part of Dewa’s wider generation portfolio. Other major assets include the Jebel Ali and Al-Aweer power complexes, Mohammed Bin Rashid Al-Maktoum (MBR) Solar Park and the Hatta hydroelectric project.
MBR Solar Park is the largest single-site solar park in the world, with a planned capacity target of 7,260MW by 2030.
Dewa recently extended the bid deadline for its seventh phase, which will add 2,000MW from photovoltaic solar panels and includes a 1,400MW battery energy storage system with a six-hour capacity.
The new bid submission deadline is 1 May.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15659537/main.jpg -
SWPC rebrands as Sharakat to reinforce PPP focus13 February 2026
Register for MEED’s 14-day trial access
Saudi Water Partnership Company (SWPC) has unveiled a new corporate identity as part of a strategy to reinforce the role of public-private partnerships (PPPs).
At a ceremony in Riyadh, the company said it will operate under the name Sharakat, reflecting its “evolution and expanding mandate in the kingdom’s water sector”.
The new identity comes as Saudi Arabia expands the use of PPPs to deliver infrastructure projects.
In January, the government launched a National Privatisation Strategy targeting more than 220 PPP contracts by 2030, including projects in the water sector.
The government is targeting over $64bn (SR240bn) in private capital investments in this period, which it said would be “a new phase focused on execution and accelerating delivery”.
Previously, the 2018 privatisation programme had focused on the ‘foundational phase’.
SWPC has served as the principal offtaker of all water in Saudi Arabia since 2017. Its mandate covers desalinated water, transmission and treatment projects. It also includes small-scale plants, collection networks and strategic water reservoirs.
The total investment value of its current projects exceeds SR56bn ($14.9bn), the offtaker said.
According to MEED Projects, SWPC has over $11bn-worth of PPP projects in the pipeline, with two projects ($2.10bn) currently under bid evaluation.
In December, local firm Vision Invest was named as the preferred bidder to develop and operate the 859-kilometre Riyadh-Qassim independent water transmission pipeline project.
The consortium of Miahona (Saudi Arabia), Marafiq Company and Buhur for Investment was also named as the preferred bidder for the Arana independent sewage treatment plant (ISTP).
Financial close for both projects is expected in 2026.
Meanwhile, SWPC has issued a request for proposals for the $150m Riyadh East ISTP, which will have a treatment capacity of 200,000 cubic metres a day (cm/d), expandable to 400,000 cm/day in the second phase.
The bid submission deadline is 2 April.
https://image.digitalinsightresearch.in/uploads/NewsArticle/15647732/main.jpg

