Megabucks for megawatts: How Morocco sold donors on its billion-dollar solar gamble

A few years ago, King Mohammed VI of Morocco, the richest monarch in Africa, decided that his country should turn toward the sun. His advisers drafted an ambitious national energy strategy, aimed at generating 42 percent of the country’s electricity from renewable sources by 2020. Its flagship project comprised a complex of four solar power plants using cutting-edge technology to generate hundreds of megawatts of electricity. In May 2013, the king personally traveled into the desert to launch construction of the first plant.

Skeptics within government ministries and donor agencies quietly noted the weak points in the plan. Morocco is a lower-middle-income country with multiple competing priorities, and many of its 34 million people still live in poverty. In effect, Morocco would be footing the bill for providing two global goods, reduced carbon pollution and early stage eco-technology development.

Why should Moroccan taxpayers, poor households or struggling local industries pay extra for solar-generated power when available conventional alternatives were significantly cheaper?

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