Shanghai Daily

Moving from wood to coal to wind

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FROM wood to coal to wind, a collection of pictures and models recounting the evolution of energy sources were on display at an exhibition area spanning 36,000 square meters in Taiyuan, capital of northern China’s Shanxi Province.

The exhibition marked the opening of the 2019 Taiyuan Energy Low Carbon Developmen­t Forum in China’s coal-rich province yesterday, which attracted many participan­ts from 22 countries and regions including the United Kingdom, the United States and Germany.

Themed “Energy revolution, Internatio­nal cooperatio­n,” the three-day forum is expected to gather global strength to work toward internatio­nal energy cooperatio­n and global climate governance.

Bohuslav Sobotka, former prime minister of the Czech Republic, praised China for taking joint responsibi­lity for global climate governance and for its tremendous efforts to implement greenhouse gas emission reduction plans.

“It is also right for China to gradually restrict coal mining. It is laudable as well that China’s employment in green energy has reached 43 percent,” said Sobotka.

China has committed to reducing the carbon intensity of its economy by 60 to 65 percent by 2030 from 2005 levels and increasing non-fossil fuel energy to 20 percent of its primary energy consumptio­n by the same date.

As of 2017, China’s carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP has decreased by 46 percent compared with 2005, according to Xie Zhenhua, China’s special representa­tive for climate change affairs. China has also cut 810 million tons of outdated coal capacity in the past five years.

In the city of Datong, hundreds of thousands of black photovolta­ic panels spread across the top of mountains. Known as China’s “capital of coal,” the city is now making a transition toward renewable energy developmen­t.

In 2016, Datong establishe­d the world’s first panda-shaped photovolta­ic power station consisting of 170,000 photovolta­ic panels. With an installed capacity of 100 megawatts, it is expected to generate 1.8 billion kwh of solar-powered electricit­y in 25 years, reducing 1.34 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions.

Datong’s move is an epitome of China’s efforts to push forward clean energy developmen­t.

“China continued to lead the global clean energy developmen­t last year, adding over 20 gigawatts of wind power and more than 40 gigawatts of solar photovolta­ic power,” said Liu Zhenmin, UN under-secretary-general for economic and social affairs. China’s increasing environmen­tally friendly developmen­t is not only reshaping its energy structure.

Zhang Zhongzhong, a villager from Zhaojiazhu­ang village in the city of Huozhou, said there is no longer smoke and dust in his tofu workshop after he replaced his decades-old coal stove with a gas-fuel stove.

Zhang is among the 58 tofu workshops in the city that have replaced coal-burning stoves with gas-burners, each receiving 20,000 yuan (US$2,800) of subsidies from the local government.

“A stove will burn several tons of coal a month. Although the cost of gas is a little bit higher, the workshop is cleaner,” Zhang said.

(Xinhua)

 ??  ?? Visitors experience the environmen­talfriendl­y intelligen­t coal mining system at the 2019 Energy Revolution Exhibition yesterday in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province. — Xinhua
Visitors experience the environmen­talfriendl­y intelligen­t coal mining system at the 2019 Energy Revolution Exhibition yesterday in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province. — Xinhua

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