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中国光伏产业在中东北非市场实现“双极突破”
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中国光伏产业正加速在中东北非(MENA)地区扩张,实现“双极突破”。2024年,中国对中东的光伏组件出口激增99%,沙特阿拉伯是最大吸收国。北非市场也呈现强劲增长,2025年上半年对非出口增长47.5%。中国主要制造商和供应商正加快在该区域的布局,包括投资建设太阳能玻璃工厂。中国央企也积极获取海外新能源项目合同。该地区能源转型需求迫切,沙特、阿联酋、突尼斯、阿尔及利亚和摩洛哥等国均设定了雄心勃勃的可再生能源目标。中国企业已占据这些市场超过70%的项目份额,并从设备供应延伸至生态系统发展,推动本地化生产和技术合作。

🌍 **中国光伏产业在中东北非实现市场拓展与产业整合**:中国光伏产品在中东北非地区(MENA)市场出口显著增长,2024年对中东出口激增99%,北非市场亦增长强劲。多家中国领先的光伏制造商和材料供应商正积极在该区域布局,包括投资建设太阳能玻璃工厂,如Kibing Group和Xinyi Glass,以及中国南方玻璃控股在埃及的巨额投资。中国央企如中国电建和中国能建也获得了价值数十亿美元的新能源项目合同,进一步巩固了中国在该地区的主导地位。这一扩张不仅是产品出口,更是全产业链的深度渗透。

⚡ **区域能源转型需求驱动中国光伏技术与产能的涌入**:中东北非地区各国为实现能源转型目标,纷纷设定了大力发展可再生能源的计划。沙特阿拉伯的“2030愿景”目标是到2030年实现超过50GW的装机容量,阿联酋则因AI数据中心建设带动了对光伏和储能解决方案的需求。突尼斯、阿尔及利亚和摩洛哥等国也设定了到2030年大幅提高新能源在能源结构中的比例。中国企业凭借其技术优势和成本效益,已占据这些市场超过70%的项目份额,为当地能源结构的绿色转型提供了关键支持。

🤝 **中国企业推动本地化发展与生态系统构建**:中国在MENA地区的光伏业务已超越单纯的设备供应,更注重生态系统的发展。例如,突尼斯凯鲁万光伏项目不仅使用了先进的自动化太阳能跟踪技术,还为当地培训了技术人员,推广了中国企业标准。在阿尔及利亚和摩洛哥,中国企业建设的发电站和“灯塔工厂”为当地创造了就业机会,减少了碳排放,并推动了本地零碳制造标准的建立。这种深度融合有助于构建可持续的能源产业生态。

🔋 **能源存储市场同步增长,中国企业占据领先地位**:与光伏产业的繁荣相伴的是能源存储市场的快速增长。2025年前八个月,中国海外能源存储订单同比增长183%,中东已成为仅次于澳大利亚的第二大市场。Hithium等公司在沙特开发的高温适用电池项目,以及CATL和Sungrow在阿联酋和沙特的储能系统项目,都展示了中国企业在提供集成解决方案方面的能力。这种“光伏+储能”的模式正日益满足当地对稳定可靠能源供应的需求。

🌐 **产业链协同与贸易壁垒规避助力中国企业全球化布局**:面对美国等地的贸易壁垒,中国光伏企业正积极利用MENA地区作为关键的海外枢纽。通过在埃及和沙特等地建立生产基地,中国企业能够规避高额关税,并将产品出口至欧洲等地区。例如,TCL中环在沙特的20GW硅片厂和CSG在埃及的玻璃生产线,与Hithium的电池基地形成了“硅片-组件-储能”的全产业链布局。这种本地化生产和全产业链协同模式,使得中国企业能够提供更具竞争力的“一站式”解决方案,并在全球能源市场中占据有利位置。

As photovoltaic arrays stretch across Saudi Arabia’s NEOM city and solar mounts rise like a forest on the edge of the Sahara Desert in Kairouan, Tunisia, China’s photovoltaic (PV) industry is rapidly expanding across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), marking a so-called “bipolar breakthrough” in global solar markets.

Data from 2024 shows Chinese PV module exports to the Middle East surged 99% to 28.79 gigawatts (GW), with Saudi Arabia alone absorbing 16.55GW. The North African market is seeing similarly robust growth: in the first half of 2025, China’s module exports to Africa jumped 47.5% year-on-year.

Leading Chinese manufacturers and material suppliers are accelerating their presence across the region. Following Kibing Group’s $685 million plan to build Egypt’s largest solar glass factory and Xinyi Glass’s $7 million investment in a solar glass plant, China Southern Glass Holding recently announced a 1.755 billion yuan ($253 million) photovoltaic glass production line in Egypt, with a daily output capacity of 1,400 tons.

China’s central state-owned enterprises are also moving aggressively to establish leadership. On October 10, Power Construction Corporation of China (PowerChina) and China Energy Engineering Group (Energy China) announced they had secured overseas new energy project contracts worth more than 31.2 billion yuan ($4.5 billion) collectively. Among them, a PowerChina consortium signed a Saudi PV project contract valued at roughly 11.7 billion yuan, while Energy China’s consortium secured projects totaling 19.55 billion yuan.

The surge in exports is being driven by urgent regional energy transition needs. Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 aims for over 50GW of installed PV capacity by the end of the decade, while the UAE’s construction of AI data centers is driving demand for integrated PV and energy storage solutions. North African countries are equally ambitious: Tunisia aims for 30% new energy share by 2030, Algeria targets 40%, and Morocco seeks 52% of its electricity from clean sources. Chinese companies have already secured more than 70% of project shares in these markets. In 2024, roughly 25% of new installations in the MENA region stemmed from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, and Algeria, forming the backbone of regional growth.

China’s involvement in North Africa has gone beyond equipment supply to ecosystem development. Tunisia’s 100MW Kairouan photovoltaic project, built by Tianjin Electric Power Construction, uses automated solar tracking technology and is expected to generate 5.5 billion kWh annually, cutting carbon dioxide emissions by 5 million tons. The project also trained 300 local technicians while promoting Chinese corporate standards. In Algeria, the 200MW Tindouf power station constructed by CSCEC created 500 local jobs, while the 300MW Ouargla project together will cut 550,000 tons of carbon emissions annually. In Morocco, CITIC Dicastal’s “Lighthouse Factory” runs entirely on green electricity, reducing carbon emissions by 96,000 tons a year and contributing to local zero-carbon manufacturing standards.

The PV boom is complemented by rapid growth in energy storage. From January to August 2025, Chinese overseas energy storage orders reached 180GWh, up 183% year-on-year, with the Middle East becoming the second-largest market after Australia. Integrated PV and storage solutions are increasingly meeting local needs. For example, Hithium’s 1GW/4GWh “Desert Eagle” project in Tabuk Province, Saudi Arabia, uses 1175Ah batteries capable of operating in high-temperature desert conditions, marking the world’s first GWh-scale long-duration storage application.

Chinese PV firms are also expanding into full industry chain collaboration. LONGi Green Energy and Tongwei, historically focused on PV modules, have entered energy storage. CATL is supplying a 19GWh storage system for the UAE’s RTC project, enabling continuous 24-hour power in high-temperature conditions. Sungrow’s 7.8GWh solution for Saudi Arabia’s ALGIHAZ project has significantly lowered costs per kilowatt-hour.

Localized production is strengthening the entire value chain. TCL Zhonghuan’s 20GW wafer plant in Saudi Arabia, CSG’s 1,400-ton/day glass line in Egypt, and Hithium’s planned battery base complement each other, creating a “wafer–module–storage” full-chain layout. Projects such as Saudi Arabia’s Sudair PV Park benefit from one-stop delivery, spanning inverters to tracking systems—a scale European competitors struggle to match.

Tariff barriers from the U.S.-China trade war are pushing Chinese firms to establish MENA as a key overseas hub. U.S. tariffs on Chinese PV modules remain at 50%, with additional anti-circumvention investigations targeting re-exports via Southeast Asia. By contrast, free trade zones and trade agreements in MENA offer cost advantages. Egypt’s Suez Canal Economic Zone, for example, allows zero-tariff exports to Europe, reducing costs compared with direct shipments.

Market concerns over potential U.S. tariff hikes have prompted production capacity initially intended for the U.S. and Europe to shift to MENA. Many Chinese PV companies are localizing production in Egypt, enabling modules exported to the U.S. to avoid extra tariffs. TCL Zhonghuan’s 20GW wafer plant in Saudi Arabia can supply Europe under preferential agreements, breaking through trade barriers. Re-exports via MENA surged in the first half of 2025, particularly from Saudi Arabia to Europe.

Energy storage firms are using the same model. HyperStrong’s Saudi plant allows products to access all six GCC countries and re-export to Africa, meeting Saudi requirements for 60% localization by 2027 while bypassing U.S. and European tariffs. By 2025, Chinese energy storage exports through MENA are projected to account for 19% of overseas shipments, up 8 percentage points from last year.

By 2030, PV installed capacity in MENA is expected to reach 84GW, with some forecasts projecting as high as 180GW, and North Africa’s share rising substantially. Chinese companies have taken a commanding lead: LONGi’s Middle East and Africa sales are up 76% year-on-year, while Sungrow’s storage orders cover more than 10 MENA countries. HyperStrong has secured a 4GW order in Saudi Arabia, leading the regional energy storage market.

Competition is increasingly focused on technology and ecosystem integration. LONGi’s HIBC modules have achieved a 27% conversion efficiency and large-scale mass production globally. Sungrow launched an integrated “solar-storage-charging-hydrogen” system, targeting data center energy needs. Hithium unveiled a sodium-lithium collaborative system aimed at AI data centers. Chinese standards are also spreading: China Power Construction is promoting PV construction norms in Tunisia, while CITIC Dicastal is developing green electricity certification in Morocco.

From the Red Sea to the Sahara, China’s new energy sector is executing a strategic breakthrough in global energy restructuring. As trade tensions reshape supply chains, MENA has emerged not just as an emerging market but as a regional energy hub linking Europe, Asia, and Africa. What began as simple product exports has evolved into a global competition for full industry chain deployment—China’s “desert gold rush” in renewable energy.

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