⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria is commissioning 1,480 MW of solar capacity across nine photovoltaic plants by August 2026, quadrupling its installed base from 437 MW. The flagship 1,000 MW M’Sila plant, backed by $1.2 billion in financing, will be one of North Africa’s largest solar installations. Sonelgaz’s new SCADA grid system — a first for North Africa — synchronizes with the commissioning timeline to enable smart grid management.

Bottom Line: Evaluate co-location opportunities near commissioning solar plants in Biskra, El M’Ghair, and M’Sila for data center and edge computing deployments.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

The 1,480 MW solar buildout directly enables Algeria’s digital infrastructure ambitions by providing the clean, scalable power that data centers and cloud deployments require.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

Commissioning runs through August 2026. Digital infrastructure planners should begin site evaluations in solar-rich wilayas now to align with the new capacity.
Key Stakeholders
Data center operators, cloud service providers, telecom infrastructure teams, energy policy planners, digital transformation officers
Decision Type
Strategic

The convergence of solar capacity, SCADA grid modernization, and fiber connectivity creates a window for positioning Algeria as a regional hub for energy-intensive digital operations.
Priority Level
High

A fourfold increase in solar capacity in a single year is a once-in-a-decade infrastructure shift that fundamentally changes the calculus for compute-intensive investments in Algeria.

Quick Take: Digital infrastructure teams should evaluate co-location opportunities near the nine solar plant sites, particularly in Biskra, El M’Ghair, and M’Sila where commissioning is most advanced. The combination of abundant solar power, Sonelgaz’s SCADA grid modernization, and Algeria Telecom’s 400 Gbps backbone creates conditions for sovereign cloud and edge computing deployments that were not feasible even 12 months ago.

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