With sanctions lifted, Syria looks to solar power as more than a patchwork fix to its energy crisis

With sanctions lifted, Syria looks to solar power as more than a patchwork fix to its energy crisis
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A Syrian man Abdul Razzaq Al-Jenan, cleans solar panels that set on his house roof, in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, June 29, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 07 July 2025
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With sanctions lifted, Syria looks to solar power as more than a patchwork fix to its energy crisis

With sanctions lifted, Syria looks to solar power as more than a patchwork fix to its energy crisis

DAMASCUS: Abdulrazak Al-Jenan swept the dust off his solar panel on his apartment roof overlooking Damascus. Syria’s largest city was mostly pitch-black, the few speckles of light coming from the other households able to afford solar panels, batteries, or private generators.

Al-Jenan went thousands of dollars in debt to buy his solar panel in 2019. It was an expensive coping mechanism at the time, but without it, he couldn’t charge his phone and run the refrigerator.

Syria has not had more than four hours of state electricity per day for years, as a result of the nearly 14-year civil war that ended with the ouster of former President Bashar Assad in December.

Syria’s new leaders are hoping renewable energy will now become more than a patchwork solution. Investment is beginning to return to the country with the lifting of US sanctions, and major energy projects are planned, including an industrial-scale solar farm that would secure about a tenth of the country’s energy needs.

“The solution to the problem isn’t putting solar panels on roofs,” Syria’s interim Energy Minister Mohammad Al-Bashir told The Associated Press. “It’s securing enough power for the families through our networks in Syria. This is what we’re trying to do.”

Restoring the existing energy infrastructure

Some of the efforts focus on simply repairing infrastructure destroyed in the war. The World Bank recently announced a $146 million grant to help Syria repair damaged transmission lines and transformer substations. Al-Bashir said Syria’s infrastructure that has been repaired can provide 5,000 megawatts, about half the country’s needs, but fuel and gas shortages have hampered generation. With the sanctions lifted, that supply could come in soon.

More significantly, Syria recently signed a $7 billion energy deal with a consortium of Qatari, Turkish, and American companies. The program over the next three and a half years would develop four combined-cycle gas turbines with a total generating capacity estimated at approximately 4,000 megawatts and a 1,000-megawatt solar farm. This would “broadly secure the needs” of Syrians, said Al-Bashir.

While Syria is initially focusing on fixing its existing fossil fuel infrastructure to improve quality of life, help make businesses functional again, and entice investors, the UN Development Program said in May that a renewable energy plan will be developed in the next year for the country.

The plan will look at Syria’s projected energy demand and determine how much of it can come from renewable sources.

“Given the critical role of energy in Syria’s recovery, we have to rapidly address energy poverty and progressively accelerate the access to renewable energy,” Sudipto Mukerjee, UNDP’s resident representative in Syria, said in a statement announcing the plan.

Sanctions crippled the power grid

While the war caused significant damage to Syria’s infrastructure, crippling Washington-led sanctions imposed during the Assad dynasty’s decades of draconian rule made it impossible for Syria to secure fuel and spare parts to generate power.

“Many companies over the past period would tell us the sanctions impact matters like imports, implementing projects, transferring funds and so on,” Al-Bashir said.

During a visit to Turkiye in May, the minister said Syria could only secure about 1700 megawatts, a little less than 20 percent, of its energy needs.

A series of executive orders by US President Donald Trump lifted many sanctions on Syria, aiming to end the country’s isolation from the global banking system so that it can become viable again and rebuild itself.

The United Nations estimates the civil war caused hundreds of billions of dollars in damages and economic losses across the country. Some 90 percent of Syrians live in poverty. Buying solar panels, private generators or other means of producing their own energy has been out of reach for most of the population.

“Any kind of economic recovery needs a functional energy sector,” said Joseph Daher, Syrian-Swiss economist and researcher, who said that stop-gap measures like solar panels and private generators were luxuries only available to a few who could afford it. “There is also a need to diminish the cost of electricity in Syria, which is one of the most expensive in the region.”

Prices for electricity in recent years surged as the country under its former rulers struggled with currency inflation and rolling back on subsidies. The new officials who inherited the situation say that lifting sanctions will help them rectify the country’s financial and economic woes, and provide sufficient and affordable electricity as soon as they can.

“The executive order lifts most of the obstacles for political and economic investment with Syria,” said Qutaiba Idlibi, who leads the Americas section of the Foreign Ministry.

Syria has been under Washington-led sanctions for decades, but designations intensified during the war that started in 2011. Even with some waivers for humanitarian programs, it was difficult to bring in resources and materials to fix Syria’s critical infrastructure — especially electricity — further compounding the woes of the vast majority of Syrians, who live in poverty.

The focus is economic recovery

The removal of sanctions signals to US businesses that Trump is serious in his support for Syria’s recovery, Idlibi said.

“Right now, we have a partnership with the United States as any normal country would do,” he said.

Meanwhile, Al-Jenan is able to turn on both his fans on a hot summer day while he watches the afternoon news on TV, as the temperature rises to 35 degrees Celsius (95 F). He doesn’t want to let go of his solar panel but hopes the lifting of sanctions will eventually bring sustainable state electricity across the country.

“We can at least know what’s going on in the country and watch on TV,” he said. “We really were cut off from the entire world.”


UN says Israeli probes into Gaza killings must ‘yield results’

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UN says Israeli probes into Gaza killings must ‘yield results’

UN says Israeli probes into Gaza killings must ‘yield results’
GENEVA: The UN insisted Tuesday that Israel must not only investigate alleged unlawful killings in Gaza like the hospital strike that killed 20 people, including journalists, the previous day, but also ensure those probes yield results.
“There needs to be justice,” United Nations rights office spokesman Thameen Al-Kheetan told reporters in Geneva, adding that the large number of media workers killed in the Gaza war “raises many, many questions about the targeting of journalists.”
His comments came after an Israeli strike on the Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza town of Khan Yunis on Monday killed at least 20 people, including five journalists, sparking an international outcry.
Reuters, the Associated Press and Al Jazeera all issued statements mourning their slain contributors, while the Israeli military said it would investigate the incident.
“The Israeli authorities have, in the past, announced investigations in such killings,” Kheetan said.
“It’s of course the responsibility of Israel, as the occupying power, to investigate — but these investigations need to yield results,” he said.
“We haven’t seen results or accountability measures yet. We have yet to see the results of these investigations, and we call for accountability and justice.”
Kheetan said at least 247 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Gaza since the war was triggered by militant group Hamas’s unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
“These journalists are the eyes and the ears of the whole world and they must be protected,” he said.
Asked if Monday’s attack could amount to a so-called “double-tap” strike, in which an initial strike is followed by a second hitting rescue workers and other civilians, Kheetan said this needed to be investigated.
“We can say that the Israeli military reportedly launched multiple air strikes on the Nasser Medical Complex, and there were two air strikes in a short period of time,” he said.
“We know that one of the five journalists appears to have been killed in the first air strike while three others, including the woman journalist, appear to have been killed in the second air strike,” he added, describing this as “a shock” and “unacceptable.”
“This incident and the killing of all civilians, including journalists, must be thoroughly and independently investigated, and justice must follow.”

Lebanon to come up with plan on August 31 to convince Hezbollah to disarm, US envoy says

Lebanon to come up with plan on August 31 to convince Hezbollah to disarm, US envoy says
Updated 14 min 8 sec ago
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Lebanon to come up with plan on August 31 to convince Hezbollah to disarm, US envoy says

Lebanon to come up with plan on August 31 to convince Hezbollah to disarm, US envoy says
  • Israel will give a counterproposal when it receives Lebanon’s plan, US envoy says
  • Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem warned the Lebanese government against confronting the Iran-backed group

BEIRUT: Lebanon will come up with a plan on August 31 to convince Hezbollah to disarm, US Special Envoy for Syria and Lebanon Thomas Barrack said on Tuesday.

Israel will give a counterproposal when it receives Lebanon’s plan, Barrack said after meeting with the Lebanese president in Beirut.

Barrack said the plan Lebanon was preparing would not necessarily involve military action to persuade Hezbollah to give up its weapons.

“The Lebanese army and the government are not talking about going to war. They are talking about how to convince Hezbollah to give up those arms,” he said.

Last week, Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem warned the Lebanese government against confronting the Iran-backed group, stating that there would be “no life” in Lebanon if it did.

Hezbollah was severely weakened by a war with Israel last year in which many of the group’s leaders and fighters were killed. A US-brokered peace agreement that ended that conflict requires the Lebanese state to disarm armed groups.

Qassem said Hezbollah and its ally Amal had postponed street protests against the US-backed disarmament initiative, allowing room for dialogue with the government, but that future protests could target the US Embassy in Beirut.

Israel signaled it would reduce its military presence in southern Lebanon if the Lebanese Armed Forces acted to disarm Hezbollah, according to a statement from the Israeli prime minister’s office.


Jordanian army intercepts balloons loaded with drugs on eastern border

Jordanian army intercepts balloons loaded with drugs on eastern border
Updated 25 min 30 sec ago
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Jordanian army intercepts balloons loaded with drugs on eastern border

Jordanian army intercepts balloons loaded with drugs on eastern border
  • The balloons were tracked and brought down as they entered Jordanian territory

DUBAI: Security forces in Jordan’s Eastern Military Zone have thwarted an attempt to fly illegal drugs into the country attached to balloons equipped with rudimentary guidance systems.

The suspicious activity was detected by border guard units working closely with security agencies and the country’s anti-narcotics department, state news agency Petra reported.

The balloons were tracked and brought down as they entered Jordanian territory, and the drugs were seized and handed over to the appropriate authorities for further investigation, the report added.

Western anti-narcotics officials have said that Jordan has become a transit point to the Gulf states for captagon, an addictive, amphetamine-type stimulant that for years has been mass-produced in Syria.

Jordan and Syria agreed in January to form a joint security committee to secure their border, combat arms and drug smuggling and work to prevent the resurgence of Daesh.


China says ‘shocked’ by Israel strike on Gaza hospital

China says ‘shocked’ by Israel strike on Gaza hospital
Updated 26 August 2025
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China says ‘shocked’ by Israel strike on Gaza hospital

China says ‘shocked’ by Israel strike on Gaza hospital
  • Foreign ministry spokesman: ‘We are shocked and condemn the fact that medical personnel and journalists have once again unfortunately lost their lives in the conflict’

BEIJING: China said on Tuesday it was “shocked” by an Israeli strike on a Gaza hospital in which five journalists were among at least 20 people killed.

“We are shocked and condemn the fact that medical personnel and journalists have once again unfortunately lost their lives in the conflict,” foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said when asked about the strikes.

“We express our condolences to the victims and our sympathies to their families.”

Reuters, the Associated Press and Al Jazeera all issued statements mourning their slain contributors, while the Israeli military said it would investigate the incident.

The ongoing war in Gaza has been one of the deadliest for journalists, with around 200 media workers killed over the course of the nearly two-year Israeli assault, according to media watchdogs.

“China is highly concerned about the current situation in the Gaza Strip,” Guo said, adding China condemns “all actions that harm civilians... including acts of violence against journalists.”

“Israel should immediately stop its military operations in Gaza, achieve a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire as soon as possible, fully restore the entry of humanitarian supplies, prevent a larger-scale humanitarian crisis, and work to ease tensions as quickly as possible.”


Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein

Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein
Updated 26 August 2025
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Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein

Sisi meets UAE leader in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein
  • Sheikh Mohamed was received upon his arrival at El Alamein International Airport by his counterpart Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi

DUBAI: UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed arrived in Egypt’s coastal city of Alamein on Monday on a fraternal visit, WAM News Agency reported. 

Sheikh Mohamed was received upon his arrival at El Alamein International Airport by his counterpart Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi.

“The two leaders engaged in cordial conversation, underscoring the deep-rooted and historical relations between the two countries,” WAM added.

El-Sisi affirmed the special standing Sheikh Mohamed holds in the hearts of Egypt and its people, which is an extension of the relationship nurtured by the UAE’s Founding Father, the late Sheikh Zayed.