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Tunisia’s green hydrogen strategy will need domestic stakeholders

Solar pannels cover the rooftops of the buildings of the Makhtar boarding school on September 29, 2022, in the Tunisian central-west region of the same name. - The Makthar boarding school, a unique business initiative is both generating income and opening pupils' minds to the outside world. Lotfi Hamadi, founder of the NGO "Wallah (Swear to God) We Can", is hoping that helping schools boost their resources through food and energy production can breathe new life into Tunisia's failing, cash-strapped educatio
To:

Al-Monitor Readers

From:

Francisco Serrano

Journalist and analyst specialized in North Africa

Date:

Aug. 24, 2024

Bottom Line:

Tunisia is positioning itself as a renewable and clean energy platform to service European markets. In May, the country signed a €48 billion agreement with a grouping made up of TotalEnergies, Eren Groupe, and Verbund to produce green hydrogen using renewable energy. But as the country increasingly attracts private investments into clean energy generation that focuses on supplying European markets, Tunisia’s own energy independence has worsened on the back of an economic crisis. Falling oil and gas output and rising energy imports have all made Tunisia’s energy supplies more unstable. The country has the natural conditions to become a hub for clean energy exports out of North Africa. But in order to secure popular backing and support for new energy projects, authorities will also have to weigh in the needs of domestic businesses and customers over the long term.

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