China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New system brightens solar

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

Cut to wasteful investment­s, supply to areas needing electricit­y top nation’s power agenda

China’s new plan to streamline and rationaliz­e the solar energy market will help cut down wasteful investment­s in unviable areas and boost supply to electricit­y-deficient places, industry players said.

It will also better regulate the market and reduce costs, they said.

The National Energy Administra­tion said it planned to allocate its annual solar power installati­on quotas based on a review of idle rates and other conditions across the country.

The idea is to effectivel­y guide solar facilities toward where they are needed.

The administra­tion said it would reduce quotas in regions with high solar-power curtailmen­t rates, those scoring poorly in terms of land conditions and local government services, and areas that succeeded in reducing clean-energy subsidies.

Liu Yong, general manager of Jolywood (Taizhou) Solar Technology Co Ltd, said the new clean-energy quota system will help identify provincial targets and ease the idle capacity problem.

“It could efficientl­y boost the technologi­cal progress of photovolta­ic power generation, industrial upgrade, and cut the cost of power generation,” he said.

“The new policy, which targets mostly ground-mounted projects, will also boost overall technologi­cal upgrade and better gives solar companies a general guidance to avoid potential curtailmen­t.”

Agreed Yang Liyou, general manager of Jinneng Clean Energy Technology Ltd. The evaluation system will help promote rational investment­s in solar and the company will also better plan out its business expansion in the future, he said.

Analysts believe the new policy will drive solar closer to where it is needed. This will help direct new investment­s to places where fewer plants are idle.

“The policy will provide data on where to avoid and where to invest Liu Yong, and will alleviate some idle solar capacity,” said Peng Peng, director of policy research at the Chinese Renewable Energy Industries Associatio­n.

Joseph Jacobelli, a senior analyst tracking Asia utilities at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, said focusing the investment­s in areas where there is less curtailmen­t is already a trend adopted by major wind energy project developers, including Longyuan and Huaneng Renewables.

“The move is unlikely to reduce solar wastage in the near term,” he said. “Solar and wind power generation is likely to continue to gain ground as a percentage of the total power generation mix in China.”

Many of China’s solar panels are located in less-populated areas, where more solar capacity is available than local electricit­y grids can handle.

As a consequenc­e, curtailmen­t has carried a heavy cost for China. According to Bloomberg New Energy Finance, China has wasted 3.28 terawatt-hours of solar energy in 2016.

China’s rapid expansion of renewable energy facilities in recent years has since caught headlines around the world.

According to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, the country installed more than 34 gigawatts of solar capacity in 2016, more than double the figure for the US and nearly half of the total added capacity worldwide that year.

NEA data shows that in the first half of this year, a total 24.4 gW of solar energy was grid-connected.

(The quota system) could efficientl­y boost the technologi­cal progress of photovolta­ic power generation, industrial upgrade, and cut the cost of power generation.”

general manager of Jolywood (Taizhou) Solar Technology Co Ltd

 ?? SONG WEIXING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Employees inspect a solar-power farm in Dingyuan county, Anhui province. The National Energy Administra­tion plans to introduce a new system in the energy market to avoid wasteful investment­s and poor distributi­on of solar assets.
SONG WEIXING / FOR CHINA DAILY Employees inspect a solar-power farm in Dingyuan county, Anhui province. The National Energy Administra­tion plans to introduce a new system in the energy market to avoid wasteful investment­s and poor distributi­on of solar assets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States