Egypt, Sweden, France partner to develop desalinate irrigation water in Africa

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Egypt, France and Sweden have partnered to set up desalinate irrigation water Africa. Egyptian company Engazaat, Sweden’s Azelio and France’s Mascara Nouvelles joined forces with the aim of enabling farmers to access these basic needs on the continent.

The three partnered and formed the Save Cleantech Utilities alliance which will provide farmers in off-grid desert regions in Africa with a model for water and electricity services. For water supply, the Save Cleantech Utilities alliance will set up water desalination systems via the Osmosun solution developed by Mascara.

Agricultural yields

The aim is to improve agricultural yields in a context marked by water stress in Africa. “In Egypt in particular, urban expansion on arable land is also pushing agriculture into the desert where water and electricity are scarce, adaptation is of the utmost necessity,” stress the three companies in a joint press release.

The water facilities will be powered by renewable microgrids using solar photovoltaic panels and the Tridonic energy storage technology developed by Azelio. In Egypt, SAVE Cleantech Utilities will initially support around 100 farmers in the Moghra region in the governorate of Marsa-Matruh through the establishment of a desalination plant.

The future plant will provide 2,250 m3 of irrigation water per day “at 1,000 ppm salinity”. The plant will be powered by a 2.3 MWp photovoltaic plant and a 260 kW/3300 kWh storage system. “The project will be classified as the first and largest solar-powered brackish water desalination plant proposed under a solar energy financing programme,” the alliance says. In Moghra, the solar-powered desalination facilities will be commissioned by autumn 2023.