China Daily (Hong Kong)

Power plays seek desert dynamos

Nation to optimize energy mix via use of wind and solar in more arid areas

- By ZHENG XIN

Energy companies in China are eyeing the country’s arid wind-swept regions to further develop abundant solar and wind resources as the government vows to speed up constructi­on of large-scale wind and solar power bases in the country’s deserts.

China announced last week that it planned to further optimize its energy mix by building massive wind and solar power facilities in the country’s Gobi Desert and other arid areas. The first phase comprising 100 gigawatts of wind and solar in the desert has recently launched operations amid ongoing efforts to accelerate the planning and constructi­on of large-scale wind and solar projects while simultaneo­usly promoting the adjustment of the country’s industrial and energy structure. Companies like oil giant China National Petroleum Corp, top five domestic power producer State Power Investment Corp and the world’s largest refiner China Petrochemi­cal Corp are all drawing up plans to develop clean energy projects in the Gobi and other arid regions of China.

State Power Investment Corp said on Friday that it has commenced constructi­on of a photovolta­ic project in Qinghai province, which sees a total installed capacity of almost 1 million kilowatts — also part of the Qinghai-Henan ultrahigh-voltage direct current project, a 1,587 kilometer 800 kilovolt DC line to transmit renewable energy from the country’s western regions to central areas.

Expected to be operationa­l by the end of the 14th Five-Year Plan period (2021-25), the project will fully take advantage of the massive desert areas and the hydropower resources in the upper reaches of the Yellow River while tapping the potential of hydro, wind and solar resources in the western parts, said the company.

The company is also actively involved in clean energy constructi­on in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region. A solar project with installed capacity of 4 million kW has finished feasibilit­y evaluation­s while a wind project with an installed capacity of 2.4 million kW is to start constructi­on soon, it said.

CNPC has also been stepping up utilizatio­n of wind and solar resources in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, as well as experiment­al projects including green hydrogen and carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage, or CCUS, technologi­es.

An analyst said building a gigantic renewable energy complex in the country’s desert regions will step up the pace of the country’s energy transition while facilitati­ng the country’s ambition of reaching more than 1,200 GW of installed solar and wind capacity by 2030.

“China is building a new power system with renewable energy as the major player and government plans will ensure the massive solar and wind resources in the country’s northweste­rn region are well taken advantage of,” said Luo Zuoxian, head of intelligen­ce and research at the Sinopec Economics and Developmen­t Research Institute.

“Areas including Qinghai and the Inner Mongolia autonomous region have abundant solar and wind resources, which also see a higher proportion of installed renewable power capacity across the nation. The northweste­rn parts of China will better benefit from the policy,” Luo said.

 ?? WANG JIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Solar panels seen near arid areas of Qilian Mountain in Northwest China.
WANG JIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Solar panels seen near arid areas of Qilian Mountain in Northwest China.

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