EDPR to begin building its largest Japanese solar plant this year

Published Fri, Sep 22, 2023 · 04:08 PM
    • The renewables unit of EDP – Portugal’s largest utility – is betting on power deals with companies to expand in the Asia-Pacific.
    • The renewables unit of EDP – Portugal’s largest utility – is betting on power deals with companies to expand in the Asia-Pacific. PHOTO: REUTERS

    THE renewables unit of Portugal’s largest utility, EDP, will start building its largest solar power plant in land-scarce Japan this year to sell power directly to a company, a senior executive said.

    With the majority of its projects in Europe and North America, EDP Renovaveis (EDPR), is betting on power deals with companies to expand in the Asia-Pacific, as it shifts focus from distributed solar installations to large projects.

    “It is a 44 MW project, which, in Japan, is essentially a mega project,” Pedro Vasconcelos, Asia-Pacific chief executive of EDPR, said. He added that construction would begin in the next one or two months, with operations to start in 2025.

    He declined to identify the company, however.

    Major investments in renewable power projects in Singapore and Vietnam helped boost the firm’s installed capacity in the Asia-Pacific to 1 GW this month, doubling from February 2022, when EDPR took over solar firm Sunseap.

    The Asia-Pacific forms about 6.6 per cent of the firm’s total energy portfolio.

    DECODING ASIA

    Navigate Asia in
    a new global order

    Get the insights delivered to your inbox.

    Vasconcelos said that the company was not facing curtailments exceeding 5 per cent in Vietnam, its key regional market, in which it operates 500 MW solar plants.

    Solar power forms a quarter of Vietnam’s installed capacity after a surge in investment in renewable power in the previous decade, but critics say that regulatory uncertainty has crimped its potential.

    Separately, Vasconcelos said that EDPR and four members of a consortium have received conditional approval from Singapore’s Energy Market Authority (EMA) to supply power from Indonesia’s Riau Islands.

    “The consortium aims to meet Singapore and EMA’s target of 1 GW by late 2027, early 2028,” he said, referring to annual imports of electricity. REUTERS

    Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

    Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services