GCC Clean Energy Investment 2026: Nuclear, Solar, Wind and Green Hydrogen

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Across the GCC, clean energy investment is accelerating at a pace that would have been unimaginable five years ago — driven by falling solar costs, government mandates, energy security logic, and the political imperative to demonstrate decarbonisation credentials on the global stage. The region’s renewable energy market in 2026 encompasses utility-scale solar and wind, nuclear (UAE’s Barakah plant), green hydrogen, and the enabling technologies of energy storage and smart grids, with billions of dollars of project investment underway from Oman to Kuwait.

UAE’s Barakah Nuclear Plant

The UAE’s Barakah Nuclear Power Plant in Abu Dhabi — the Arab world’s first operational nuclear power station — began commercial operation in 2021. The four-reactor plant, built by a South Korean KEPCO-led consortium, has a total capacity of 5,600 MW and will supply approximately 25 percent of the UAE’s electricity needs when fully operational. Barakah demonstrates the UAE’s commitment to clean, baseload electricity generation that can support the grid stability requirements that intermittent solar and wind alone cannot provide.

Oman’s Renewable Push

Oman has significant renewable energy ambitions driven by the need to reduce gas consumption for domestic power generation, freeing gas for export as LNG. Oman’s Dhofar Wind Farm — the Arab world’s first commercial utility-scale wind farm — has been operational since 2019. Larger projects under development include the Manah Solar Parks (approximately 1 GW total) and the HYPORT Duqm green hydrogen project, a joint venture targeting green ammonia export from Oman’s Port of Duqm industrial zone. Oman’s geography provides excellent wind resources in the Dhofar region and strong solar irradiance across most of the country.

Kuwait and Bahrain’s Clean Energy Ambitions

Kuwait’s National Energy Strategy targets 15 percent renewable electricity by 2035, primarily through solar projects in the country’s southern desert areas. The Al Shagaya renewable energy park, a flagship Kuwait project combining solar photovoltaic, concentrated solar power (CSP), and wind, has seen phased development. Bahrain has more limited renewable potential due to its small geographic area but has invested in offshore wind feasibility studies and solar installations across government buildings and industrial areas.

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See also: Saudi Arabia Renewable Energy 2026, UAE Renewable Energy 2026, and GCC Economic Diversification.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the GCC have nuclear power?

Yes. The UAE operates the Arab world’s first nuclear power plant — Barakah in Abu Dhabi — which reached full four-reactor commercial operation with a combined 5,600 MW capacity. Saudi Arabia has announced plans to develop a nuclear programme (Saudi Arabia is a signatory to the non-proliferation treaty), and multiple GCC countries have expressed interest in nuclear power for baseload generation. The UAE’s experience with Barakah, including the regulatory framework (Federal Authority for Nuclear Regulation, FANR) and the KEPCO operating model, provides a template for the region.

Why is the Gulf investing in renewables if it produces oil?

GCC countries have compelling economic logic to shift domestic electricity generation to renewables: every unit of electricity produced from solar or wind frees an equivalent volume of oil or gas for export at much higher value. Saudi Arabia historically burned significant quantities of valuable crude oil for domestic power generation — replacing this with cheap solar electricity is pure economic logic, independent of any climate commitment. Additionally, GCC governments recognise that global decarbonisation trends will eventually reduce oil demand, making diversification into clean energy production and export a strategic hedge.

Also Read: GCC Energy Transition 2026: Oil Giants Building a Renewable Future | Cricket in the GCC: How Gulf Nations are Making Their Mark in International Cricket | ADNOC and TotalEnergies Sign AED 15 Billion UAE Green Hydrogen Production Partnership

Layla Hassan
Layla Hassan
Senior Correspondent, Gulf & GCC Affairs

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