China Daily Global Weekly

Tapping plentiful energy sources

Major wind, photovolta­ic projects in desert areas help power China’s march toward a greener future

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

The huge Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, with vast desert expanses of strong winds and intense sunshine, has become a pioneer in the country’s new energy drive. It is turning its natural endowments into power for a greener future.

Xinjiang’s renewable energy production reached 37.22 billion kilowattho­urs in 2022, up 25.5 percent yearon-year, according to the Xinjiang branch of State Grid Corp of China, the country’s largest State-owned utility company.

Clean energy accounted for around 30 percent of the total power transmitte­d to 20 other Chinese provinces, autonomous regions and municipali­ties, including Henan, Anhui and Shandong provinces. It has effectivel­y balanced power demand and supply in the country, the branch said.

The region transmitte­d a record high of more than 125.8 billion kWh of electricit­y to other parts of the country last year, up 2.77 percent year-onyear, it said.

Xinjiang’s new energy push is only part of the country’s accelerati­ng shift from fossil fuels to clean energy, as it vows to peak carbon dioxide emissions by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060.

China plans to speed up the constructi­on of solar and wind power generation facilities in the Gobi Desert and other arid regions amid efforts to boost renewable power, according to a statement jointly released by the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and the National Energy Administra­tion in 2022.

China had launched the first phase of wind and solar power projects by the end of 2021, comprising a total of 100 gigawatts of wind and solar power capacity in desert areas that cover 19 provinces. The second phase will focus on the Gobi and other sandy and rocky regions, with an estimated investment of up to 3 trillion yuan ($442 billion) in related industries, it said.

Most of the projects will be located in the northweste­rn parts of China that have vast renewable energy resources, including the Inner Mongolia, Ningxia Hui and Xinjiang Uygur autonomous regions.

Local government­s are not only transformi­ng their advantages in local resources into an economic advantage, but also ensuring a sufficient power supply for the country.

Market observers and industry experts expect that China’s attempt to greatly expand its wind and solar power capacity will further facilitate the country’s low-carbon energy transition and ensure domestic energy security.

The transition will further optimize China’s energy mix and facilitate the country’s ambition to have non-fossil fuels account for 20 percent of total energy consumptio­n by 2025 and 25 percent by 2030, said Luo Zuoxian, head of intelligen­ce and research at the Sinopec Economics and Developmen­t Research Institute.

China’s plan to build massive wind and solar power facilities in the country’s desert areas will also facilitate the country’s ambition of reaching 1.2 billion kilowatts of installed solar and wind capacity by 2030.

The project will boost the proportion of clean power in the country’s energy mix while helping the country to achieve its sustainabl­e energy ambitions.

The regions involved will also be able to promote the developmen­t of an industrial chain for the manufactur­e of new-energy equipment, Luo said.

He said government efforts to transition to green energy have enabled regions like Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia — whose economic growth

has long relied on heavy consumptio­n of traditiona­l energy sources that brought with it problems such as pollution from burning coal — to upgrade to a new-energy-based structure.

In addition to Xinjiang, installed capacity of new energy connected to the grid in Inner Mongolia and Qinghai has also been climbing in recent years.

Such new energy connection­s in Inner Mongolia, the country’s largest coal producer, had exceeded 65 million metric tons by the end of 2022, as the region has adjusted its energy structure while continuing to produce coal.

Inner Mongolia also finished developing a series of wind power projects last year, including one in Xiliin Gol League with a capacity of 7 million kW and one in Ulanqab with 6 million kW of capacity.

A key national energy producer, Inner Mongolia has set a goal of new energy surpassing thermal power generation by 2030.

China’s new energy industry is leading the world after years of developmen­t, from installed capacity and technical levels to industrial chain capacity, said the NEA.

China’s green transition has been gaining momentum, with total installed capacity for renewable energy generation rising to 1.1 billion kW over the past 10 years, it said. Generation capacities in hydropower, wind, solar and biomass are tops in the world, it added.

Eyeing significan­t opportunit­ies, domestic companies are also laying out plans to further tap the potential in the Gobi Desert and other arid regions in China.

China Three Gorges Corp is carrying out a huge clean energy project with an overall installed capacity of 16 million kW and an investment of 80 billion yuan in Inner Mongolia’s Kubuqi Desert, China’s seventh-largest desert.

The project, to include 8 million kW of solar power capacity and 4 million kW of wind power, is expected to be the world’s largest power generation center of its kind in desert areas.

The company said the project also includes an advanced and efficient coal power installati­on of up to 4 million kW in a supporting role, as well as 4-6 million kW of energy storage.

Once completed, the center is expected to be able to transfer about 40 billion kWh of electricit­y to the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region a year, with over half of it being clean energy. That is equivalent to saving about 6 million metric tons of standard coal and reducing carbon dioxide by about 16 million tons, the company said.

Wei Hanyang, a partner at the nonprofit Crossborde­r Environmen­t Concern Associatio­n, said renewable energy projects are usually capitalint­ensive and those with more than 1 GW of installed capacity in large deserts would require multiple channels of financing and policy support, an area in which China excels.

“It is also likely that large, Stateowned enterprise­s will reallocate some funding from previous coal projects to renewable centers so that the process can be accelerate­d,” Wei said.

“With more gigawatt-level centers to be constructe­d, China will need to invite more participat­ion from various sectors of society and set up a proper compensati­on mechanism.”

The State Power Investment Corp has also vowed to continue accelerati­ng the constructi­on of massive wind and solar power facilities in the Gobi Desert and other arid regions, as part of the efforts to boost the green energy transition.

China is expected to generate 3.3 trillion kWh of electricit­y a year from renewable energy by 2025 as part of its plan to further boost its green energy transition during the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) period, according to a statement released by the NDRC in January.

The increase in renewable energy generation is expected to exceed 50 percent during the period, while wind and solar power generation is also expected to double, it said.

The plan calls for renewable energy to further replace fossil fuels to facilitate the country’s constructi­on of a low-carbon energy system, it said.

 ?? WANG ZHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Wind turbines are installed at Hinggan League, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, in December.
WANG ZHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY Wind turbines are installed at Hinggan League, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, in December.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Workers install photovolta­ic panels in Aksu, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, in September.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Workers install photovolta­ic panels in Aksu, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, in September.

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