Firms prepare Oman wind IPP bids
5 November 2024

Prequalified bidders are considering partners and their plans prior to bidding for the contracts to develop and operate two of five planned wind independent power producer (IPP) projects in Oman.
Oman’s Nama Power & Water Procurement Company (Nama PWP) prequalified companies that can bid for the contracts to develop and operate five wind IPPs, which will have a maximum total combined capacity of about 1,006MW, in September.
In the same month, it issued a request for proposals for the contracts to develop the Jalan Bani Bu Ali wind IPP, one of the three schemes that will cater to Oman’s Main Interconnection System (MIS), and the Dhofar 2 wind IPP, which will cater to the smaller Dhofar Power System (DPS).
Nama PWP expects to receive bids for the two contracts in early February 2025.
The Jalan Bani Bu Ali wind IPP, located in South Sharqiyah Governate, will have a capacity of 91MW-105MW and has a commercial operation target of Q1 2027.
Adjacent to the existing Dhofar wind 1 IPP in Shaleem and Al-Hallaniyat Islands in Dhofar Governate, the Dhofar 2 wind plant will have a capacity of 114MW-132MW and will be operational in Q2 2027.
The developers that have been prequalified to bid for the five wind IPP schemes are:
- Acwa Power (Saudi Arabia)
- Sembcorp (Singapore)
- Sumitomo (Japan)
- TotalEnergies (France)
- Masdar (UAE)
- Alfanar (Saudi Arabia)
- EDF Renewables (France)
- Elecnor (Spain)
- Goldwind (China)
- GED / Marafiq (Saudi Arabia)
- Hero Asia Investment (Hong Kong)
- Itochu (Japan)
The remaining three wind farms will be tendered separately, according to a source familiar with the projects.
The remaining two projects catering to the MIS are:
- Duqm wind IPP: Located in Ras Madrakah in Duqm, the project will have a capacity of 234MW-270MW, with commercial operations expected in Q4 2027
- Mahoot wind 1 IPP: Located in Mahoot in the Al-Wusta Governate, the wind farm will have a capacity of 342MW-400MW, with a commercial operation target of Q4 2027
The other wind farm catering to the DPS is the Sadah wind IPP. Located in Sadah in the Dhofar Governate, it will have a capacity of 81MW-99MW and is due for commercial operation in Q4 2027.
Nama PWP, previously Oman Power & Water Procurement Company, appointed KPMG Lower Gulf as the financial adviser, UK/US-headquartered Dentons as the legal adviser and Australia’s Worley as the technical adviser for the wind IPPs.
Renewable energy, mainly derived from solar photovoltaic power plants, accounted for an estimated 6% of Oman’s electricity production capacity as of 2023.
Longer-term, Oman aims to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
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