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In the Land of Oil, an Energy Revolution: Saudi Arabia’s Solar Push Shakes Global Market

Riyadh: In a move that is sending shockwaves through the global energy market, Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, is drastically cutting its own domestic oil consumption. The Kingdom’s rapid transition to renewable energy sources, particularly solar power, is now being seen as a major threat to the future of the oil market—a threat emerging not from Western electric vehicle adoption, but from within the heart of the oil empire itself.

For the last two decades, Saudi Arabia’s growth in oil consumption was surpassed only by China and India. A significant portion of this oil was used to generate electricity, especially to power air conditioning during the scorching summer months. Now, under its “Vision 2030” plan, the country aims to completely replace this with solar power and natural gas. The goal is to generate 130 gigawatts of solar energy by 2030, a capacity roughly equal to the entire solar production of India. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), this shift alone could cause the single largest drop in global oil demand within the next five years.

While many were initially skeptical of these ambitious targets due to slow progress on other Saudi megaprojects, recent developments are proving the doubters wrong. Solar projects are now being completed at a remarkable pace. ACWA Power, a leading Saudi energy company, has already activated approximately 4.9 gigawatts of solar capacity in 2024 alone and has announced plans for a similar expansion by next year.

This energy transition is driven by a shrewd economic strategy. As Saudi Aramco President Amin Nasser has clarified, reducing domestic consumption frees up more crude oil for the export market. The scale of this internal shift is staggering: the Saudi electricity grid alone consumes more oil than all the cars and scooters in India combined.

As this massive consumer weans itself off oil by the end of the decade, an already oversupplied global market could be pushed into a deeper and more prolonged crisis.

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