Egypt's engazaat to invest $100m in regional green utility projects

Egyptian asset manager engazaat plans to invest more than $100m over the next two years to support its regional expansion in climate infrastructure, the company announced on Sunday. The investment forms part of a $250m project pipeline, focusing on integrated water-energy-food systems.

Egyptian asset manager engazaat, which specializes in water-energy-food (WEF) systems, is introducing the first fully integrated investment and operational model of its kind in the Middle East and Africa for green energy and water-for-food projects. "We approach water, energy, and food infrastructure as one connected investment case," said Muhammad El Demerdash, founding partner and CEO of engazaat. "When these systems are designed and financed together, they perform better and cost less to run. That is the model we have been building and operating for over 14 years."

The company operates a "utilities-as-a-service" business model under a Build–Own–Operate (BOO) framework, developing, owning, and operating assets while clients pay for services such as irrigation, water pumping, and renewable electricity. To finance its expansion into clean infrastructure, engazaat has launched the SAVE Sustainable Infratech Fund, a $200m investment platform in partnership with CI Capital. The fund will be overseen by financial regulators in Egypt and Abu Dhabi, with an implementation timeline to be announced later.

Founded in 2011, engazaat has delivered a $33m portfolio in sustainable assets. Its current operations include more than 63 MW of solar capacity and the management of over 15 million cubic metres of water annually for agricultural purposes. The firm is expanding to operate across three countries through long-term service agreements with commercial, agricultural, and industrial clients.

A flagship project is SAVE-1 in Egypt's Dakhla Oasis, New Valley governorate, which combines renewable energy and water systems to support local agriculture and is expected to reduce more than 460,000 tonnes of CO₂ over its operating life.

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Egypt has launched the second phase of developing the Ataba area in Cairo, as part of a government strategy to modernize urban markets and upgrade infrastructure in key commercial districts. Minister of Local Development and Environment Manal Awad announced the phase is fully funded under the ministry's investment plan.

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Egypt's Minister of Local Development and Environment Manal Awad chaired the first board meeting of the Bioenergy for Sustainable Development Foundation for the 2025-2026 fiscal year, focusing on scaling up biogas initiatives nationwide. The meeting approved the foundation's internal regulations, administrative structure, budget, and upcoming work plan to promote sustainable development and resource efficiency. Awad emphasized expanding biogas technology to generate energy and electricity while producing organic fertiliser, supporting sustainable agriculture, creating jobs, and mitigating waste's environmental impact.

Egyptian renewable energy firm Rees Tech is aiming for sales of about EGP 1bn in 2026, fueled by surging demand for solar systems in the local market, according to Chairperson Ibrahim Gamal. This target doubles the company's 2025 revenues, which reached roughly EGP 500m.

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Emtelaak Investment has received approval from the Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) to establish Emtelaak for Underwriting and Management of Real Estate Investment Funds, chaired by Waleed Shaarawy. The new company will handle managing and underwriting real estate investment funds, following an earlier FRA approval in November 2025 for the Emtelaak Real Estate Investment Fund.

 

 

 

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