Tunisia

Africa Celebrates The First Floating Solar Power Plant In Tunisia


Published: Tuesday July 5, 2022
By: Oilfield Africa Review

The French company Qair is inaugurating a floating solar power plant in the Tunis lake, in the presence of the Tunisian authorities. The installation will inject 265 MWh of clean energy into the network of the Tunisian Electricity and Gas Company (STEG) every year.

A floating solar power plant goes into operation in Tunisia. The park is equipped with inverters and solar panels installed on the Tunis Lake, located between the Tunisian capital and the Gulf of Tunis. The plant is the result of a project developed since 2020 by the Qair Group, an independent power producer (IPP) based in Paris, France. The facility was recently inaugurated in the presence of Neila Nouira Gongi, the Tunisian Minister of Industry, Energy and Mines, and her counterpart Samir Saied, in charge of the Economy.

The new solar power plant has a capacity of 200 kWp, or an annual capacity of 265 MWh according to the Qair group. The energy produced is injected into the network of the Tunisian Electricity and Gas Company (STEG). According to IPP, its plant is capable of supplying 130 Tunisian households.

According to the IPP, the new plant should enable Tunisia to avoid emissions of 120 tonnes of CO2 equivalent per year. The Qair Group built the floating solar power plant on the Tunis lake with the support of Business France, a French public agency of an industrial and commercial nature. The IPP also relied on funding from the Private Sector Study and Support Fund (FASEP), a funding mechanism of the French Treasury.

Although a pilot project, this solar photovoltaic plant contributes to the diversification of Tunisia’s electricity mix. Currently, the North African country is 97% dependent on gas for the production of its electricity, according to the National Agency for Energy Management (ANME). But under the Tunisian Solar Plan (PST), the authorities are counting on the production of 1,860 MW of clean energy by 2023 and 3,815 MW by 2030. This programme has seen very little progress since its launch in 2012.

Sponsored Partners

Discover our premium partners and explore their innovative solutions in the industry
Conferences & Exhibitions
MSGBC 2025: HyDeal Ambition to Drive Green Hydrogen Dialogue as Strategic Partner
Monday November 3, 2025
Conferences & Exhibitions
ADIPEC 2025: SLB Unveils Innovative New Agentic AI Technology for the Energy Industry
Monday November 3, 2025
Egypt
TAG Oil Extends the Evaluation Period for BED-1
Monday November 3, 2025

Sponsored Partners

Discover our premium partners and explore their innovative solutions in the industry

Company News
Cakasa Completes Construction and Erection of Stockgap Mounded Bullet Tanks
Saturday November 1, 2025
Uganda
Uganda to Unlock 600 million Barrels in New Oil Finds
Friday October 31, 2025
Conferences & Exhibitions
NIES 2026:  Lokpobiri Tasks the Organizer for an Improved World-class Event
Tuesday October 28, 2025
Guinea Conakry
Guinea-Conakry Emerges as West Africa’s Next Oil & Gas Frontier
Tuesday October 28, 2025
Solar energy
TotalEnergies and Aljomaih to Build 400 MW Solar Power Project
Tuesday October 28, 2025
Seismics
Unlocking New Opportunities in the Permian Basin
Tuesday October 28, 2025
Downstream
NNPC Renews Commitment to Develop Downstream Infrastructure
Tuesday October 28, 2025
Mozambique
TotalEnergies is Going Back to the Mozambique LNG Project
Monday October 27, 2025
Exclusive
NCDMB Set to Train Over 10,000 Nigerians in High-Demand Oil Skills
Sunday October 26, 2025