Monday – Friday | 09:00 – 18:00

Renewable Energy, Clean Power and Green Hydrogen in the UAE

UAE clean-energy routes for foreign investors: utility-scale IPP/partnership, green-hydrogen offtake, free-zone manufacturing, and corporate clean power.

The UAE is building clean power at scale — large-scale solar, a growing green-hydrogen ambition and a nuclear base. For a foreign investor the entry routes are specific: utility-scale generation is programme- and partnership-led, green hydrogen is offtake-led, and manufacturing, services and corporate clean-power procurement enter on their own terms.

The UAE has made clean energy a national priority, with a 2050 energy strategy, a national hydrogen strategy, the region's largest solar parks and a nuclear base, all backed by deep, long-horizon capital and long-term, creditworthy offtake. Its clean-power proposition rests on large-scale solar, a growing low-carbon-hydrogen ambition and a nuclear base that supports grid decarbonisation. For a foreign investor, though, the practical entry routes are more specific than "invest in UAE energy": utility-scale renewable generation through IPP or partnership structures; green hydrogen and ammonia through offtake-led partnerships; clean-energy manufacturing, EPC, O&M and technology services through free-zone or mainland vehicles; and, increasingly, corporate clean-power procurement by large industrial and data-centre users. The first question is which of these the company is doing — because the route, the partner and the structure differ sharply.

UAE · Industry

At a glance

  • The UAE backs clean energy with deep, long-horizon capital, a national strategy and long-term, creditworthy offtake — a programme-led model, not a merchant auction market.
  • Utility-scale solar, wind and storage are largely delivered through IPP and joint-venture structures with government-owned or government-linked energy companies (the Abu Dhabi and Dubai energy companies and the national clean-energy champion).
  • Green hydrogen and ammonia are offtake-led — fertiliser, refining, steel, shipping and bunkering, and export buyers in Europe and Asia — with the project as much a port, storage, shipping and buyer-credit problem as an electrolyser one.
  • Clean-energy equipment manufacturing — electrolysers, modules, components — and EPC, O&M and technology services enter through free-zone or mainland vehicles with full foreign ownership in many cases.
  • Large industrial users, data centres and manufacturers increasingly enter as corporate clean-power buyers, needing reliable lower-carbon electricity for cost, ESG and customer commitments.
  • Large-scale solar, nuclear baseload and competitive power supply underpin the UAE's clean-power proposition and feed demand from industry and data centres.
UAE · Industry

The UAE clean-energy model

The UAE's clean-energy ambition is large, well-funded and government-led. A 2050 energy strategy targets a major rise in the clean-energy share of the mix this decade, with very large allocations to renewables; a national hydrogen strategy aims to position the country as a significant producer and supplier of low-carbon hydrogen by 2031. The national clean-energy champion is building a global renewables portfolio measured in tens of gigawatts and targeting around 100 gigawatts by 2030 and up to a million tonnes a year of green hydrogen by 2030; the region's largest solar parks are operating and expanding; and a nuclear plant supplies around a quarter of the country's electricity as a low-carbon base. The UAE has also launched the first gigascale round-the-clock solar-and-storage project, pairing several gigawatts of solar with very large battery storage to deliver continuous renewable power, targeted for around 2027. The result is a system with competitive, increasingly low-carbon power, and a pipeline of solar, storage, hydrogen and ammonia projects. These positions are current to 2026 and move with each project; confirm the latest at the time of decision. What matters for an entrant is the route in, which depends on the part of the sector.

UAE · Industry

Which part of the sector are you entering?

Clean energy in the UAE is several businesses, and the structure follows which one a company is in.

The mistake is to treat UAE clean energy as a single market-entry decision, or to assume a private developer can simply bid for utility-scale capacity as in a merchant market. The starting point is the role, the partner and the offtake — or, for a power buyer, the site, the tariff and the clean-power evidence.

  • A utility-scale developer of solar, wind or storage generation enters largely through an IPP or joint-venture structure with government-owned or government-linked energy companies, on long-term creditworthy offtake — programme-led and partnership-led, not merchant.
  • A green hydrogen or ammonia producer enters through partnership at the industrial and export hubs, with the offtake — export to Europe and Asia, fertiliser, refining, steel, shipping and bunkering — and the certification at the centre.
  • A clean-energy equipment manufacturer — electrolysers, solar components, storage, balance-of-system — enters through a free-zone or mainland vehicle with full foreign ownership in many cases.
  • An EPC, operations-and-maintenance, technology or services provider supplies the projects and plants, often through a free-zone or customer-led entity.
  • A corporate clean-power buyer — a data centre, factory, logistics hub or other large user — procures reliable lower-carbon electricity to meet cost, ESG or customer commitments, rather than building generation at all.
UAE · Industry

Utility-scale renewable generation: IPP, procurement and partnership

Utility-scale generation in the UAE is not a merchant market in which a foreign developer simply builds and sells power freely into the grid. Large solar, wind and storage projects are usually procured through utility-led IPP programmes, competitive procurement or joint-venture structures involving government-owned or government-linked energy companies — and utility generation can touch strategic-impact activity, which reinforces the partnership route. The attraction is bankability: long-term offtake from government-owned or government-linked counterparties and low-cost capital make these projects highly bankable. The trade-off is that market entry is programme-led and partnership-led, rather than a standalone wholly-owned generation play.

UAE · Industry

Green hydrogen and ammonia: partnership, ports, certification and offtake

Green hydrogen and ammonia are the UAE's most strategic clean-energy bet, aimed at export as much as domestic use, under a national hydrogen strategy to position the country as a significant producer and supplier of low-carbon hydrogen by 2031. The model is partnership at industrial scale — the national champions developing electrolyser-and-renewable capacity at the industrial and port hubs, frequently with international energy partners, and converting hydrogen to ammonia for shipping. The binding constraint is offtake: a project is bankable only with a creditworthy, long-term buyer, and for green ammonia it is as much a port, storage, shipping and buyer-credit problem as an electrolyser one. The likely buyer categories are worth identifying early:

A foreign investor enters this segment through partnership and offtake, and the certification and logistics route should be secured alongside the technology, not after it.

  • ammonia and fertiliser producers;
  • refining;
  • steel;
  • shipping and bunkering fuel;
  • export buyers in Europe and Asia;
  • domestic industrial offtakers; and
  • certification and guarantee-of-origin, which underpins the green premium.
UAE · Industry

Manufacturing, EPC and services: free-zone and mainland routes

Away from the programme-led generation and hydrogen projects sits a broader and more straightforward opportunity: making the equipment and supplying the services the clean-energy build-out needs. Electrolyser manufacturing is already being localised in the UAE through international partnerships, and there is room for solar components, storage, balance-of-system and the wider supply chain, as well as for EPC, operations-and-maintenance, engineering and technology providers. These enter through free-zone or mainland vehicles with full foreign ownership in many cases, subject to the licensed activity, tax position and any strategic-impact restrictions — and, where the entity is a Qualifying Free Zone Person earning qualifying income, a 0% corporate-tax rate on that income (non-qualifying income is taxed at 9%) — without the partnership requirement that governs utility generation. For many foreign companies, this is the accessible UAE clean-energy entry.

UAE · Industry

Corporate clean-power procurement

Not every foreign entrant into the UAE clean-energy sector is a developer or manufacturer. Many are power buyers. A data centre, industrial plant, logistics hub or advanced manufacturer may need reliable, lower-carbon electricity to meet customer, ESG or operating-cost commitments.

The legal structure may involve a long-term power-supply arrangement, clean-energy certificate, behind-the-meter solution, district cooling or utility-linked procurement, depending on the emirate and the facility. For large users, the key questions are power availability, tariff, reliability, carbon profile, evidence of clean-power attributes and whether the arrangement supports the company's sustainability claims.

For these businesses, clean power is not a separate investment thesis. It is part of the site-selection, licensing, customer-contract and financing structure.

UAE · Industry

How a foreign company enters

The vehicle depends on the business. A utility-scale or hydrogen project is structured as an IPP or joint venture with government-owned or government-linked energy companies, with the offtake and the project-finance package at its centre. A manufacturer, EPC or services provider uses a free-zone or mainland company with full foreign ownership in many cases, with the clean-tech free zones and the Abu Dhabi industrial and energy zones the usual homes. A corporate clean-power buyer addresses power as part of site selection — the supply arrangement, tariff, clean-power evidence and licensing for the facility. Above the operating entity, groups frequently place a holding or investment vehicle in ADGM or DIFC for the holding, financing and investor arrangements, covered on our UAE financial-services page. Substance, the qualifying-free-zone-income conditions, and the technology and transfer-pricing position on imported equipment are the recurring structural points. The route follows the role.

UAE · Industry

The India-UAE corridor

Many clean-energy and industrial groups will look at both the UAE and India, as independent decisions. The UAE offers government-linked, highly bankable utility and hydrogen projects, an export-hydrogen ambition and a free-zone base for manufacturing; India offers vast domestic demand, a 100%-automatic-route generation market, a green-hydrogen production incentive and a large manufacturing opportunity. A group can pursue export-oriented hydrogen and manufacturing in the UAE and demand-led generation and manufacturing in India, structuring the holding and the cross-border flows so each market plays to its strength. The India entry is covered on its own page; where a group runs both, the corridor structure is designed together.

UAE · Industry

Where this goes wrong

  • Assuming a private developer can bid for UAE utility-scale generation as in a merchant market, when it is IPP- and partnership-led.
  • Committing a hydrogen project on the technology alone, without the offtake, port, shipping and certification route.
  • Missing that manufacturing and services enter freely through a free zone, and over-complicating an accessible entry.
  • For a large power user, leaving power availability, tariff and clean-power evidence until after site selection, when it shapes cost and customer commitments.
  • Underweighting the qualifying-free-zone-income conditions and substance for the tax position — and, for a large multinational equipment maker, the 15% Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax that overrides the free-zone 0% from January 2025.
  • Leaving the holding, technology and transfer-pricing structure until after the project is committed.
UAE · Industry

How ATB Corporate helps

ATB advises foreign investors entering UAE clean energy, and matches the structure to the business — utility-scale generation, green hydrogen and ammonia, equipment manufacturing, services or corporate clean-power procurement. We work the IPP or joint-venture terms with government-owned or government-linked energy companies and the offtake for generation and hydrogen; the free-zone or mainland vehicle, qualifying-income and ADGM or DIFC holding structure for manufacturing and services; the power-supply and clean-power-evidence arrangements for large buyers; the technology, EPC and transfer-pricing position; and the export and certification route for hydrogen. For groups also entering India, the structure is designed across the India-UAE corridor. The aim is a clean-energy position whose partner, offtake, structure and tax all work together before the capital is committed.

Questions

Renewable Energy & Hydrogen — Answered

The activity decides the route. Utility-scale solar, wind and storage are largely entered through IPP or joint-venture structures with government-owned or government-linked energy companies, on long-term creditworthy offtake. Green hydrogen runs through offtake-led partnership. Equipment manufacturing, EPC and services enter through free-zone or mainland vehicles, and large users can enter simply as corporate clean-power buyers.

No. Foreign companies entering UAE clean energy may enter as developers, hydrogen or ammonia producers, equipment manufacturers, EPC/O&M providers, technology suppliers or corporate clean-power buyers.

A foreign company usually cannot independently build a renewable-energy project in the UAE as a standalone merchant project. Large utility-scale projects are generally procured through utility-led IPP programmes, competitive procurement or joint ventures with government-owned or government-linked energy companies.

For UAE green hydrogen: offtake, port access, storage, shipping, certification and buyer credit. The technology is important, but the project is not bankable unless the buyer and export or domestic-use route are credible.

Yes. Clean-energy equipment, components, EPC, engineering and services businesses may use free-zone or mainland vehicles in the UAE, depending on customers, contracting needs and tax treatment. The 0% free-zone rate applies only to qualifying income of a Qualifying Free Zone Person, with non-qualifying income taxed at 9%; and a manufacturer in a multinational group with consolidated revenue of EUR 750 million or more is within the UAE's 15% Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax from January 2025, whatever the free-zone position.

Renewable Energy & Hydrogen

UAE clean energy is programme-led, not a merchant market: utility-scale generation runs through IPP and JV structures with the national companies, while hydrogen is an offtake, port and buyer-credit question as much as a power one.

Licensing, approvals and any tax treatment are decided by the authorities on the facts. Talk to our team when you are ready.

Get in touch