Cairo: Expanding investments in wind energy and solar power can free up Egypt’s carbon energy, reduce fiscal spending and create job, said a report released by consultancy PWC.

For the biggest Arab country with a population of 86.9 million, its oil and gas reserves are a two-edged sword and developing renewable energy will not only ease pressure on government budgets but also create jobs and attract foreign direct investments, Xinhua quoted the report as saying on Sunday.

According to the PricewaterCoopers study titled ‘Developing renewable energy projects in Egypt’, co-authored by Eversheds and Shahid Law Firm, the North-African country is the largest non-Opec oil producer and second largest natural gas producer in Africa, “but also the largest oil and natural gas consumer in Africa.”

Natural gas and oil are the primary fuels used to meet energy demand, accounting for 94 per cent of total energy consumption in 2013. But the study found that Egypt’s potential natural gas exports had previously been diverted to the domestic market to meet growing energy demand.

As Egypt’s gas exports declined by an annual average of three per cent from 2009 to 2013, experts say that the government should step up investments in wind energy and solar power.

By 2018, there could be 80 or more private energy generators across the country, most of which are renewable, dramatically changing the source of the electricity Egypt consumes, the report said.

Earlier in the year, Egyptian President Abdul Fattah Al Sissi said at the World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi his country aims to double solar power capacity.

The Egyptian government expects the renewable energy sector to produce 20 per cent of total power generation by 2020, 12 per cent of which will be generated by wind energy alone, said the study.