MEED estimates that the cost of building this additional capacity is likely to be around $19.5bn. But with banks increasingly reluctant to extend long-term or project financing and contractors experiencing labour shortages and uncertain construction costs, the sector faces significant challenges.
MEED's latest insight report states that the UAE district cooling market is five years ahead of the rest of the GCC, although Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Bahrain all have strong growth potential.
The report also reveals that:
• With more than $1 trillion of real estate projects planned or under way in the GCC, district cooling companies are preparing for a massive increase in business.
• A move to central plants is needed if the industry is to reach its full potential. Central plants with large pipe networks, rather than units built to service specific buildings, allow for a much larger number of offtakers.
• Securing finance at a competitive rate and on a long-term basis is a critical issue for the industry, made worse by the state of the global debt markets.
• With water demand rising across the region, the district cooling sector is increasingly looking to use treated sewage effluent and seawater in its plants.
• As with many sectors of the GCC construction industry, district cooling contractors have experienced high inflation over the past three years, with costs rising by 70-100 per cent.
• The long-term success of the industry depends on changing governments' attitudes to the supply of air conditioning: district cooling is still regarded as an optional extra, unlike electricity and water.
"The regional district cooling market has a bright future given the amount of investment planned in the real estate sector and the growing need to use energy resources more efficiently. However, to meet the burgeoning demand, the sector faces very real financial and contracting challenges,"
says Peter Shaw-Smith, Senior Researcher and author of the report.
Browse
related articles
Posted by Siba Sami Ammari
