Green energy to uphold occupation in Western Sahara
Article image

Western Sahara Resource Watch has today launched a report detailing how Morocco intends to build over 1000 MW (megawatts) of renewable energy plants in Western Sahara, a territory that Morocco partially occupies.

Published 28 August 2013

“These upcoming solar and wind projects, no matter how green, will be severely damaging for the people of Western Sahara. The energy produced will be used to capitalise on the resources already illegally being exploited by Morocco in Western Sahara, thereby intensifying the ongoing pillage. And by exporting the energy to the EU and to Morocco proper, the occupying power seeks to anchor its untenable claim over the territory”, stated Sara Eyckmans, coordinator of Western Sahara Resource Watch (WSRW). 

Download the report ‘Dirty Green March’ here.

Morocco does not produce oil and gas itself, and its government hungers for energy. The report shows that the new front for solar and wind energy production will be in the territory that the Saharawi people fled from after the Moroccan military invasion in 1975, known as the Green March. 

As of today, the energy production from solar and wind sources in Western Sahara constitutes at most 5.5 percent of Morocco’s total energy production from such sources. By 2020, however, the amount could be increased to an astonishing 26.4 percent, according to the new report. 

Large international players in the green energy sector have so far caught the bait from the Moroccan government. Most companies mentioned in the report have not responded to questions regarding their plans. As of today, as the report is being launched, equipment for installing wind technology is being offloaded on the harbour of El Aaiun, Western Sahara. 

Ever since the invasion, the Moroccan government has used the natural resources of Western Sahara as it pleases, in violation of international law. With the increased energy access, both the fisheries sector and extractive industries will be more lucrative. Through the plans, Morocco is furthermore connecting the territory it occupies to its own and Europe’s energy grid, a sly political move. 

The legal owner of the land, the Saharawi people, has not consented to the Moroccan plans, therefore the plans are in violation of a key United Nations legal opinion on the matter. To this day, the UN consider Western Sahara to be a colony.
 

This is what the ECJ said on trade in Western Sahara

WSRW has summarised the key findings of the landmark rulings on Western Sahara of the EU Court of Justice, of 4 October 2024. 

06 November 2024

Morocco still searching partner for controversial cable

Days after the ECJ ruling, Morocco is still trying to find a company that will connect its illegal energy projects in occupied Western Sahara to the Moroccan grid.

04 November 2024

GE Vernova under pressure in occupied Western Sahara

The US company GE Vernova is seemingly gambling with its lucrative projects elsewhere when it operates in occupied Western Sahara for the Moroccan government. 

22 October 2024

Morocco to double dirty green energy in occupied Western Sahara

The Moroccan government is allegedly planning a $2.1 billion investment in new controversial infrastructure projects in occupied Western Sahara.

18 October 2024