Qatar to tender Facility E plant contract
11 September 2023
Qatar state utility General Electricity & Water Corporation (Kahramaa) is expected to issue the request for proposals (RFP) for the contract to develop Qatar’s Facility E independent water and power producer (IWPP) project soon.
“The RFP is planned to be issued by the end of September,” a source close to the project tells MEED.
MEED understands the client received statements of qualifications (SOQs) from interested developers in July.
Most utility developers that previously qualified to bid for the contract have submitted SOQs, as MEED reported.
The Facility E IWPP scheme will have a power generation capacity of 2,300MW and a water desalination capacity of 100 million imperial gallons a day (MIGD).
The contract to develop the Facility E IWPP was first tendered in 2019. The three teams that submitted bids for the contract in August 2020 were:
- Engie (France) / Mitsui (Japan) / Yonden (Shikoku Electric, Japan)
- Sumitomo / Kansai Electric (Japan)
- Marubeni / Kyushu Electric (Japan)
The original plan for the Facility E IWPP was to have a power generation capacity of about 2,300MW and a desalination component of 100MIGD once fully operational.
However, the project owner revised the power plant design capacity to 2,600MW, for which it sought alternative prices from bidders.
In January 2022, MEED reported that the technical and financial evaluation was under way for the single bid Kahramaa received in November 2021 for the Facility E IWPP project.
The sole bidder for the contract was understood to be a team led by Japan’s Marubeni Corporation following the withdrawal from the bidding process of two consortiums, one led by French utility developer Engie and the other by Japan’s Sumitomo Corporation.
Facility E is Qatar’s fifth IWPP scheme. Completed and operational IWPPs include three projects in Ras Laffan – known as facilities A, B and C – and Facility D in Umm al-Houl.
MEED understands the new target commercial operation date for the Facility E IWPP project has been moved to 2027.
The state utility appointed a new team of advisers for the project in 2020.
The transaction advisory team includes UK-headquartered PwC and Clyde & Co as financial and legal advisers, and Prague-headquartered Energo as technical adviser.
According to MEED Projects data, an estimated $129bn-worth of thermal, nuclear and renewable energy power generation plants are being planned and procured across the GCC states. Thermal power plants account for about one-third of the total.
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Kuwait extends bid deadline for Al-Khairan phase one IWPP6 March 2026

Kuwait has extended bidding for the first phase of the Al-Khairan independent water and power producer (IWPP) project.
The project is being procured by the Kuwait Authority for Partnership Projects (Kapp) and the Ministry of Electricity, Water & Renewable Energy (MEWRE).
The facility will have a capacity of 1,800MW and 33 million imperial gallons a day (MIGD) of desalinated water.
It will be located at Al-Khairan, adjacent to the Al-Zour South thermal plant.
The new deadline is 30 April.
The main contract was tendered last September, and the deadline had already been extended once, most recently until 4 March.
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The winning bidder will sign a set of PPP agreements covering financing, design, construction, operation and transfer of the project.
The energy conversion and water purchase agreement is expected to cover a 25-year supply period.
Kapp extended another deadline recently for a contract to develop zone two of the third phase of the Al-Dibdibah power and Al-Shagaya renewable energy project.
The PPP authority is procuring the 500MW solar photovoltaic independent power project (IPP) in partnership with the ministry.
The bid submission deadline was moved to the end of April, a source close to the project told MEED.
According to the MEWRE, the total generation capacity currently offered under partnership projects has reached 6,100MW, equivalent to about 30% of Kuwait’s existing power capacity.
The ministry and Kapp are also preparing to tender the main contract for the 3,600MW Nuwaiseeb power and water desalination plant after plans were approved by Kuwait’s Council of Ministers last November.
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UAE utilities say services stable amid tensions6 March 2026
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Abu Dhabi National Energy Company (Taqa) and Etihad Water & Electricity (EtihadWE) have confirmed that water and electricity services in the UAE are operating normally amid ongoing regional tensions.
In a statement, Taqa said it had activated its risk management frameworks and “power generation, water desalination, transmission, distribution and wastewater services are operating safely and without interruption”.
According to Etihad WE, services are being delivered with “approved response plans” and “precautionary operational procedures” amid the current regional circumstances.
Taqa is one of the UAE’s largest integrated utilities, with assets including the Taweelah B independent power and water (IWPP) plant and the 2,400MW Fujairah F3 combined-cycle power plant.
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In January, Taqa and Etihad won a contract alongside France’s Saur to develop and operate a major wastewater treatment plant in the UAE’s northern emirate of Ras Al-Khaimah.
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Drawn-out conflict may shift planning priorities6 March 2026
Commentary
Mark Dowdall
Power & water editorAcross the GCC, power and water networks have largely been planned around steadily rising consumption, driven by population growth and cooling demand.
A drawn-out conflict in the region may begin to change how planners think about these systems – particularly how they can keep operating if parts of the network are disrupted.
On Thursday, Iran’s Energy Minister Abbas Aliabadi said that US-Israeli attacks had damaged water and electricity supply facilities in several parts of the country, while urging the public to be careful with water and electricity consumption.
So far, major power and water infrastructure in the GCC has largely avoided damage. In the case of desalination, plants of this scale supply drinking water to millions of people, so striking them would immediately affect civilian populations and represent a significant escalation.
There is also an element of mutual vulnerability. Iran relies on its own electricity and water infrastructure, and Aliabadi’s comments this week suggest those systems are already under pressure. Targeting desalination plants in the GCC could invite similar disruptions at home.
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Additionally, the kingdom has about $8bn-worth of water storage projects in early study or feed stages. As regional tensions persist, schemes like this may move higher up the priority list.
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US oil companies to profit while Middle East exports are curtailed6 March 2026
While the oil and gas operations of the Middle East’s biggest producers are being dramatically curtailed by the conflict sparked by the US and Israel’s attack on Iran, US producers are likely to see windfall profits.
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The Dutch Title Transfer Facility rose by 55%, reaching its highest level since fuel markets spiked after Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
One of the key factors driving prices higher was Qatar – the world’s second-biggest LNG producer – halting exports on 2 March after Iranian attacks on several facilities.
Qatar is expected to take at least several weeks to restart exports from its liquefaction terminals.
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While the world’s second-biggest LNG producer is likely to be offline for some time, the US – the world’s biggest LNG producer – is already operating near full capacity and is benefiting from the higher-price environment.
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If the disruption persists and significant long-term damage is done to Middle East oil and gas infrastructure, US-based oil and gas companies could record another year of record profits.
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