China is on track to meet 2030 renewable energy target six years ahead of schedule

zohaibahd

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The big picture: China, once viewed as a climate policy laggard due to its massive energy demands, is now breaking records in installing wind and solar power. New data shows the pace of the nation's clean energy transition is equivalent to bringing five large nuclear power plants' worth of renewables online every single week.

According to a report from the Sydney-based Climate Energy Finance (CEF) think tank, China will meet its aggressive 1,200 gigawatt renewable target for 2030 by the end of this month – a staggering 6.5 years ahead of schedule.

The numbers back it up. In the first five months of 2024 alone, China added 103.5 gigawatts of emissions-free capacity, accounting for 90 percent of all new power installations. Solar led the charge with 79.2 gigawatts, up 29 percent year-over-year, while wind added 19.8 gigawatts, an increase of 21 percent. Hydro came in third with 3.4 gigawatts worth of additions, although this was a 21 percent year-over-year decrease.

Overall, the country is installing at least 10 gigawatts of new solar and wind power every fortnight.

Equally impressive is the way these new installations are being built. Since the largest energy consumers are China's massive cities on its eastern end – and they are dominated by apartment buildings – rooftop solar panels haven't seen the kind of uptake we've seen in the West.

Instead, China is building many of its new wind and solar farms in desolate western regions like the Gobi Desert. Once the clean electricity is generated, it is transmitted over 3,000 miles east via the world's longest high-voltage transmission lines, according to an ABC News report.

At the same time, urban areas are seeing unique installations, such as a massive floating dual-rotor wind turbine sturdy enough to operate during hurricanes.

One of the big challenges with switching to intermittent renewable sources like solar and wind is ensuring a steady supply of power at all times. Renewables typically have a "capacity factor" of only around 25 percent, whereas nuclear power can operate at up to 90 percent of its maximum potential.

To stabilize this intermittent renewable supply, China is using a mix of energy storage from pumped hydro facilities, utility-scale batteries, and somewhat counterintuitively, new coal-fired power plants as well.

However, according to the China Energy Council's estimates, renewable generation will actually overtake coal-fired output by the end of this year. Despite the new additions, coal's overall share of electricity is dropping rapidly as clean energy continues to ramp up – even as the country remains the global leader in installed coal power capacity.

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China making a lot of countries look bad in key areas like climate change and technology.
I call BS
China has been building new coal power plants despite the government's pledges to control the fossil fuel and environmental goals. In 2023, China added 47.4 gigawatts (GW) of new coal power, which is more than double the amount added by the rest of the world combined. This brings the total amount of new coal power approved in China over the past two years to 218 GW, which is enough to power Brazil.

https://www.carbonbrief.org/china-r...-coal-power-construction-in-2023-report-says/
 
China making a lot of countries look bad in key areas like climate change and technology.

Emitting more carbon than the combined EU and US put together is hardly a shining example of climate change improvements. Producing nearly a billion tons of CO2 to install all of these new projects is going to take many decades to become more beneficial than coal plants. If they don't last, they are a net negative as far as climate change is concerned. They need to be functional for their full expected lifespan, and lets face it, China isn't exactly known for producing quality goods, especially when working conditions are poor.
 
I call BS
China has been building new coal power plants despite the government's pledges to control the fossil fuel and environmental goals. In 2023, China added 47.4 gigawatts (GW) of new coal power, which is more than double the amount added by the rest of the world combined. This brings the total amount of new coal power approved in China over the past two years to 218 GW, which is enough to power Brazil.

https://www.carbonbrief.org/china-r...-coal-power-construction-in-2023-report-says/

Exactly! China is playing the world. I wouldn't trust the Chi-coms for nothing.
 
We have been building plenty ourselves but you don't see it advertised so much. Still lots to do along with further development of the safer nuclear options that have been coming along ....
 
I call BS
China has been building new coal power plants despite the government's pledges to control the fossil fuel and environmental goals. In 2023, China added 47.4 gigawatts (GW) of new coal power, which is more than double the amount added by the rest of the world combined. This brings the total amount of new coal power approved in China over the past two years to 218 GW, which is enough to power Brazil.

https://www.carbonbrief.org/china-r...-coal-power-construction-in-2023-report-says/

The city's EV penetration rate reached 67.9% in 2023, nearly double the national average of 35.7%. The EV sector is an important pillar of China's economic transformation and also an important tool in achieving the country's "dual carbon" targets - to peak carbon emissions by 2030 and reach carbon neutrality by 2060.Apr 17, 2024

China is already where the US said they wanted to be in 2035.
 
Emitting more carbon than the combined EU and US put together is hardly a shining example of climate change improvements. Producing nearly a billion tons of CO2 to install all of these new projects is going to take many decades to become more beneficial than coal plants. If they don't last, they are a net negative as far as climate change is concerned. They need to be functional for their full expected lifespan, and lets face it, China isn't exactly known for producing quality goods, especially when working conditions are poor.
China’s carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are set to fall in 2024 and could be facing structural decline, due to record growth in the installation of new low-carbon energy sources.

 
China making a lot of countries look bad in key areas like climate change and technology.
If western countries disregarded environmental regulations (or otherwise simply started dumping toxic stuff around) if they stopped respecting human rights and human dignity, China would not be leading.
You can achieve many things, but some of them are impossible together.
 
China is notorious for _building_ massive amounts of stuff...that never gets used, and eventually gets torn down or just decays. The whole article talks about the "installed capacity" they have _built_, not what is _in service_.

This has all the earmarks of Greenwashing. They're building all this so they can 'show the world' how advanced they are. All CCP disinformation.

 
The city's EV penetration rate reached 67.9% in 2023, nearly double the national average of 35.7%.

"The city". What city are you talking about?

The EV sector is an important pillar of China's economic transformation and also an important tool in achieving the country's "dual carbon" targets - to peak carbon emissions by 2030 and reach carbon neutrality by 2060.Apr 17, 2024

China is already where the US said they wanted to be in 2035.

I'll believe it when they release data on what proportion of their ACTUAL ENERGY USAGE comes from all this capacity building.

And actually, I probably won't even believe it then, because the CCP is a despotic regime that has no concern for human or civil rights - or the truth.
 
Interesting times, a lot of companies are pulling out of China. They can't trust The CCP to move the goal posts. Companies like stability. China has a huge internal debt problem so looking for golden gooses to pluck

Plus no certainty it can recover money or investments in China, So you only get out your product, not your plant to ship to Vietnam or maybe even yuan in the bank

Chinas energy made go down naturally, no one wants kids as too expensive, and less stuff made in China
China is mainly a factory. They do have electric cars , some phones, batteries, solar power, televisions and probably a lot of other stuff they design and make, but is it enough , if the worlds factories move else where or come home as need only 10% of employees than when they went to China or less

Anyone remember China and USSR 5 year plans and how every year production was up, and no shortages in their supermarkets in the 1980s/1990s. Ie distrust any official statistics
 
The EV sector is an important pillar of China's economic transformation ... China is already where the US said they wanted to be in 2035.
Oops! Did you miss this?

"...China accounted for 95% of the world’s new coal power construction activity in 2023, according to the latest annual report from Global Energy Monitor (GEM). Construction began on 70 gigawatts (GW) of new capacity in China, up four-fold since 2019...."

Most of China's electricity comes from coal. And coal emits some 60% more CO2 than gasoline per unit energy released. EVs powered by coal actually emit MORE CO2 than gas-powered vehicles.
 
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"The city". What city are you talking about?



I'll believe it when they release data on what proportion of their ACTUAL ENERGY USAGE comes from all this capacity building.

And actually, I probably won't even believe it then, because the CCP is a despotic regime that has no concern for human or civil rights - or the truth.
Copy and paste some of the text into Google to get the source.
 
You posted the non-sequitur claim about some city in China. With nearly a thousand 'official' cities in China, I'm not going to go on a wild goose chase to be able to say that your claim is without foundation.
Some city?
So you didn't look?
That wasn't the only one...
 
Some city?
So you didn't look?
That wasn't the only one...

Nowhere in this article on Techspot; nowhere in the report this article links to; nowhere in 'TheBigT42' comment beginning "I call BS" that you replied to making the claim; nowhere in the article TheBigT42 linked to; and nowhere in any of your other comments is there any reference to "the city" you say has a 67.9% EV 'penetration' rate.

Absent any source in this discussion that mentions "the city", the claim is pulled from thin air.
 
Absent any source in this discussion that mentions "the city", the claim is pulled from thin air.
The city is Shenzhen; the claim comes from a Singapore-based site that failed to source it (and, incidentally, caused my virus monitor to issue an four-alarm warning). I didn't bother to challenge it as it's irrelevant. China's coal-powered EVs emit more CO2 than other nation's gas-powered vehicles do.
 
Nowhere in this article on Techspot; nowhere in the report this article links to; nowhere in 'TheBigT42' comment beginning "I call BS" that you replied to making the claim; nowhere in the article TheBigT42 linked to; and nowhere in any of your other comments is there any reference to "the city" you say has a 67.9% EV 'penetration' rate.

Absent any source in this discussion that mentions "the city", the claim is pulled from thin air.
hahahanoobs said:
The city's EV penetration rate reached 67.9% in 2023, nearly double the national average of 35.7%.

That's just one city...

Google isn't that hard to use. Copy and paste part of my quoted text to find the source:

You should probably also do some research on BYD and where they are positioned in the EV space - globally.
 
hahahanoobs said:
The city's EV penetration rate reached 67.9% in 2023, nearly double the national average of 35.7%.

That's just one city...

Google isn't that hard to use. Copy and paste part of my quoted text to find the source:

You should probably also do some research on BYD and where they are positioned in the EV space - globally.

Has nothing to do with using google, it's getting people to put at least the minimal amount of rigor into stating things clearly in the first place.

Now, tell me about the house.
 
The city is Shenzhen; the claim comes from a Singapore-based site that failed to source it (and, incidentally, caused my virus monitor to issue an four-alarm warning). I didn't bother to challenge it as it's irrelevant. China's coal-powered EVs emit more CO2 than other nation's gas-powered vehicles do.
Thanks. Didn't intend for someone else to do the googling. I just have a problem with non-sequiturs that expect a person to read another person's mind.
 
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