Saudi Arabia is not just talking about renewable energy; it’s building it at scale. With a transformative $32 billion investment pipeline, the Kingdom is setting the stage to become a global leader in sustainable energy by 2030.
A vision in action
Under Vision 2030, Saudi Arabia aims to generate 50% of its electricity from renewable sources, expanding capacity to 130 gigawatts (GW) — with 58.7 GW from solar and 40 GW from wind. This ambitious goal drives over 50 major projects spanning solar, wind, and energy storage technologies.
The objective is clear: a carbon-neutral economy by 2060, millions of green jobs, and a renewable ecosystem that transforms the Kingdom’s energy landscape.
Key projects driving change
al Shuaibah Solar Plant: A 2.6 GW solar development powering industrial zones and residential areas.
Dumat Al Jandal Wind Farm: A 400 MW wind farm, Saudi Arabia’s first large-scale onshore wind project.
Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park Phase V: The world’s largest single-site solar installation at 900 MW.
Neom Green Hydrogen Facility: A groundbreaking $5 billion project, combining solar and wind energy to produce green hydrogen.
Together, these projects form an integrated energy ecosystem that will cut over 130 million tonnes of CO₂ emissions annually and create 200,000 direct and indirect jobs across the emerging green economy.
Strategic partnerships and funding
ACWA Power anchors the pipeline with over $15 billion in committed projects. Their approach blends solar photovoltaic, concentrated solar power with thermal storage, wind energy, and advanced battery storage, achieving record-low electricity costs of $0.018/kWh. Strategic partnerships with EDF Renewables, Marubeni Corporation, and Jinko Solar accelerate delivery, reduce risks, and enable technology transfer.
The Public Investment Fund (PIF) dedicates $10 billion to renewable infrastructure and green technology. Complementing this, the Saudi Green Development Program contributes $3.2 billion in concessional loans, grants, and risk-sharing instruments that lower financing costs by 200–300 basis points.
International development banks, including the World Bank Group, Islamic Development Bank, and AIIB, provide $8 billion in funding. Private sector contributions via green bonds, infrastructure funds, and corporate partnerships bring in the remaining $10.8 billion.
Building the value chain
PIF extends funding beyond generation, supporting the entire renewable value chain:
- $2 billion for domestic solar panel manufacturing with LONGi Solar and First Solar.
- $1.5 billion for wind turbine assembly with Vestas and GE Renewable Energy.
- $800 million for advanced battery storage production.
The fund’s venture capital arm backs emerging technologies like perovskite solar cells, floating solar systems, green hydrogen electrolyzers, and smart grid infrastructure. Strategic acquisitions of international renewable companies further expand technology access and global market presence.
Corporate partnerships with Saudi Aramco ($4 billion renewable commitment), SABIC, and Ma’aden demonstrate integration of traditional energy sectors with sustainable alternatives.
Implementation and metrics
The pipeline runs 2025–2030:
- Phase I (2025–2026): 8 GW of utility-scale solar and wind capacity.
- Phase II (2027–2028): 12 GW via distributed systems and energy storage.
- Phase III (2029–2030): Final 10 GW including floating solar, offshore wind, and grid-scale hydrogen.
By 2030, Saudi Arabia aims to reach 30 GW total renewable capacity, cut electricity costs by 40%, and establish a $25 billion annual green energy export industry, positioning itself as the Middle East’s renewable hub.
Why it matters
For investors, tech providers, and strategic partners, this pipeline offers unprecedented access to one of the world’s fastest-growing renewable markets. Government guarantees, competitive returns, and long-term growth potential make Saudi Arabia a global clean energy leader.
See it in action in Saudi Arabia
The $32 billion green energy pipeline is more than numbers — it’s a revolution in motion. CARE KSA, taking place on 8-9 December at J.W. Marriott, Riyadh, brings together policymakers, investors, and innovators driving Saudi Arabia’s renewable future. If you want to meet the people building the Kingdom’s clean energy ecosystem and explore partnership opportunities firsthand, this is where the deals, insights, and collaborations happen.