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Jordan to accelerate electrical connectivity with Ƶ

Special Jordan to accelerate electrical connectivity with Ƶ
Hala Zawati. (Twitter)
Updated 28 January 2019

Jordan to accelerate electrical connectivity with Ƶ

Jordan to accelerate electrical connectivity with Ƶ
  • Amjad Rawashdeh: “We are talking about connecting our grid with Ƶ, and strengthening our ability to exchange power with our neighbors in a mutually beneficial way”

AMMAN: Jordan will look to increase connectivity with its neighbors in order to improve efficient use of electricity in the region.
Speaking on Jordan Television’s “60 Minutes” program, the minister for energy and mineral resources, Hala Zawati, suggested that increasing Jordanian production of solar power would allow the country to export excess electricity to other countries during daylight hours, only buying fossil fuel-derived power at night, mostly from Ƶ.
Amjad Rawashdeh, the director general of Jordan’s National Electric Power Company (NEPCO), said: “We are talking about connecting our grid with Ƶ, and strengthening our ability to exchange power with our neighbors in a mutually beneficial way.”
Given the nature of solar power, he said, it was possible for Arab countries like Jordan to produce cheaper energy at different times of day, making it sensible to improve connectivity between nations to save money for their consumers.
He added that NEPCO expected it would take some time to achieve, given practical differences between the countries’ grids, but that all parties were “serious” about improving energy connectivity, affordability and efficiency: “We in Jordan welcome this idea. It is a win-win for both sides.
“In Ƶ they work on 60 hertz while we work on 50 hertz. We will need to find a way to overcome this technical difference, but we will. Cooperation with Ƶ and other Gulf countries is our priority.”
Basel Burgan, an environment and energy commentator in Jordan, believes the plan has merit.
“This is a smart idea. We have many solar projects that are very inexpensive. We can produce electricity using solar power for JOD 0.170 ($0.239) per kilowatt, which is much cheaper than producing it from gas burners that costs JOD 0.50 per kilowatt,” he said.
“Solar is extremely affordable; therefore, it is wise for us to sell it in the day, and buy Saudi electricity when the sun is down.”