Oil rich Arabia investing in green future
Arabian countries that rely on dollars from oil are now pumping enormous sums into green energy research to stay ahead of the curve.
Abu Dhabi is an oil-exporting country, and we want to become an energy-exporting country and to do that we need to excel at the newer forms of energy,
said Khaled Awad, director of a zero-carbon city rising in the Abu Dhabi desert.
The second annual World Future Energy Summit, which starts Monday in Abu Dhabi, signals the region's intent to maintain its hold on energy production, The New York Times reported Tuesday.
While grant money is tight elsewhere, King Abdulla University of Science and Technology awarded a Stanford University researcher $25 million in 2008 to find a way to reduce the cost of solar energy production.
The university also gave a California researcher $8 million to develop environmentally-friendly concrete.
Abu Dhabi's crown prince said in January he will invest $15 billion in green energy, the same amount President-elect Barack Obama proposed to kick start a clean energy future
in the United States, the Times said.
In developing future energy sources, Arabian countries have two advantages: Money from oil to fund projects and plenty of sunshine to research solar power, the Times said.
UPI
- Asia, US helps Mercedes Benz sales hit record high in 2006
- Cricova: The Largest Underground Wine Cellar in the World
- What does Remortgage mean?
- Dutch bear profit rises 26 percent
- Foreign direct investment in India doubles during 2006
- Greece: Socialist government's budget deficit of 12.5% caused debt crisis
- Toyota in talks to build new China plant
- Walt Disney profit up 39 percent
- DaimlerChrysler is not planning to manufacture trucks in India
