The Egyptian renewable energy market is expanding because policymakers introduced the national target to source 42% of electricity from renewables by 2030. Continued multilateral finance, abundant solar irradiance of about 2,600 kWh/m² in southern governorates, and world-class 55% wind capacity factors along the Gulf of Suez sustain robust project pipelines. Utility-scale schemes still capture 88% of installed capacity, yet distributed rooftops and captive plants record the fastest expansion. The government’s allocation of 41,700 km² for green-hydrogen-linked solar and wind projects underpins a future export platform for low-carbon fuels.
Egypt Renewable Energy Market Trends and Insights
Supportive Government Targets & Incentives
The National Low-Carbon Hydrogen Strategy announced in August 2024 estimates a USD 18 billion GDP uplift by 2040 and more than 100,000 new jobs. Public-sector capital re-allocation means half of FY 2024/2025 investment spending is earmarked for green projects compared with 15% three years earlier. The “Golden Licence” regime under Investment Law 72/2017 condenses permitting to a single window, accelerating bankable projects that meet export or import-substitution thresholds. Under the NWFE platform, USD 14.5 billion of concessional finance has flowed to renewables since 2020, with USD 3.9 billion channelled to private developers. Feed-in tariffs ranging from 84.8 Pt/kWh for sub-200 kW systems to 102.5 Pt/kWh for 20-50 MW plants ensure predictable revenues.Abundant Solar Irradiance & High-CF Wind Corridors
Southern Egypt registers solar brightness near 2,600 kWh/m² annually, placing the Egyptian renewable energy market among the world’s most resource-rich solar provinces. Red Sea wind corridors exceed 7 m/s, delivering 55% to 63% capacity, enabling levelised costs below USD 0.08/kWh for offshore arrays. Benban Solar Park, a 1.5 GW complex over 37 km², showcases utility-scale density and cost discipline. With resource synergies, hybrid solar-wind sites support 24-hour hydrogen electrolyser operation targeting USD 1.7/kg production by 2050. Such natural advantages anchor the long-term competitiveness of the Egyptian renewable energy industry.Grid Congestion & Transmission Bottlenecks
Legacy networks designed for centralised gas turbines strain as renewable penetration edges beyond 3.5 GW, mirroring global queues of 3,000 GW awaiting interconnection. Egypt’s wide-area monitoring rollout across 220/500 kV lines lifts visibility but earmarks capital needs approaching USD 600 billion globally by 2030. The 3,000 MW Egypt-Saudi HVDC link scheduled for 2025 provides critical redundancy for variable flows. Planned Libya and Cyprus interconnectors of up to 3,000 MW each could turn Egypt into a regional balancing hub, yet rely on timely domestic grid upgrades. Distribution-level constraints and limited smart-meter penetration still curb the rapid uptake of small-scale generation in the Egyptian renewable energy market.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Multilateral Climate-Finance Inflows
- Green-Hydrogen Export MoUs Triggering Additional Capacity
- FX Depreciation Inflates Imported Equipment Costs
Segment Analysis
Wind posted a 35.10% share of Egypt renewable energy market size in 2025 and is set for a 31.05% CAGR through 2031 as the Gulf of Suez corridor continues to deliver 40%-plus capacity factors. Hydropower anchored by the 2.1 GW Aswan High Dam retains the largest single-asset footprint but loses share as environmental and transboundary concerns block new dams. Solar PV and CSP supplied roughly 27.84% of capacity in 2025 and will add 8 GW by 2031 on the back of USD 0.12 / W bifacial modules.Developers prioritize wind for hydrogen because 35%-plus utilization is essential to keep electrolyzer costs down, a threshold solar seldom meets. ACWA Power’s 1.1 GW Suez project, equipped with 138 Envision 6 MW turbines, is contracted to a 400 MW electrolyzer that will export green ammonia to Rotterdam. ENGIE’s 650 MW Red Sea Wind farm added two-hour lithium-ion storage to move power to evening peaks, showcasing hybrid revenue stacking. Pumped-storage options advance slowly due to USD 3.8 billion capital needs and seven-year timelines, while CSP adoption stalls under water scarcity and price competition from solar-plus-battery layouts.
The Egypt Renewable Energy Market Report is Segmented by Technology (Solar Energy, Wind Energy, Hydropower, Bioenergy, Geothermal, and Ocean Energy) and End-User (Utilities, Commercial and Industrial, and Residential). The Market Sizes and Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Installed Capacity (GW).
List of companies covered in this report:
- Vestas Wind Systems A/S
- Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy S.A.
- General Electric Renewable Energy
- Envision Energy
- Scatec ASA
- ACWA Power
- Masdar (Abu Dhabi Future Energy)
- SkyPower Global
- Infinity Power
- Lekela Power
- Toyota Tsusho Corporation
- JinkoSolar Holding Co., Ltd.
- Elsewedy Electric Co. SAE
- Orascom Construction PLC
- New & Renewable Energy Authority (NREA)
- Hassan Allam Utilities
- Siemens Energy Egypt
- EDF Renewables
- TotalEnergies Renewables
- Engie Egypt
Additional benefits of purchasing this report:
- Access to the market estimate sheet (Excel format)
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Vestas Wind Systems A/S
- Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy S.A.
- General Electric Renewable Energy
- Envision Energy
- Scatec ASA
- ACWA Power
- Masdar (Abu Dhabi Future Energy)
- SkyPower Global
- Infinity Power
- Lekela Power
- Toyota Tsusho Corporation
- JinkoSolar Holding Co., Ltd.
- Elsewedy Electric Co. SAE
- Orascom Construction PLC
- New & Renewable Energy Authority (NREA)
- Hassan Allam Utilities
- Siemens Energy Egypt
- EDF Renewables
- TotalEnergies Renewables
- Engie Egypt

