Faced with rising power consumption and a grid under pressure, Dubai is stepping up its efforts to improve energy efficiency, while boosting the role played by renewable resources in meeting demand. Long term, a broad range of initiatives, supported by a new regulatory framework announced last year, should help bring energy costs under control.
Dubai has teamed up with the Environmental Centre for Arab Towns, a research institute, in a bid to drive down energy usage by 20% over the next three years. Its efforts also include a plan to cut CO2 emissions by 6200 tonnes annually. The move to reduce consumption will bring environmental benefits, while also easing some of the strain on the power grid.
Among its first initiatives, the Dubai Municipality will target the methods used to light parks, roads and public areas. Road, path and park lights will be converted from traditional, grid-fuelled set-ups to solar-powered LED units during the coming years, in a change which should immediately reduce the lighting system’s power usage by up to 55%, while bringing down costs longer term. The energy captured from the solar panels could be used to help power the irrigation and water systems needed for maintaining green spaces, which are expected to feature in future projects planned by the municipality.
The government has also targeted public transport in its efforts to tackle energy costs. In an initiative which started out as a pilot programme over a year ago, the Roads and Transportation Authority (RTA) recently added ten new biodiesel buses to its fleet and now plans to increase the number by 60. Officials estimate that the buses will reduce energy costs by 7%, with CO2 emissions expected to fall by as much as 34%.
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