Global Times

A GROWING GREEN TREND

▶ Photovolta­ic businesses embrace low- carbon developmen­t

- By GT staff reporters Page Editor: yangkunyi@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Chinese photovolta­ic companies are ramping up efforts to embrace the low- carbon developmen­t trend in countries along the Belt and Road against the backdrop of China’s commitment to make the Belt and Road Initiative ( BRI) a platform for advancing sustainabl­e developmen­t.

While China’s carbon neutrality goal is conducive to enhancing the upgrading and transforma­tion of the manufactur­ing industry and reducing costs through mass production, partner countries are able to access to the new energy solutions from China in the accelerati­on toward eco- friendly growth, experts said.

The trend is already ady gaining momentum despite the epidemic and trade complexiti­es that have disrupted internatio­nal investment and cooperatio­n.

The latest study by the IIGF Green Belt and Road Initiative Center of the Internatio­nal Institute of Green Finance ( IIGF) at the Central University of Finance and Economics ( CUFE) in Beijing shows that overall investment­s in the BRI in 2020 were about $ 47 billion, a decline of 54 percent to investment­s in 2019. However, renewable energy investment­s such as solar, wind and hydro topped the table of overseas energy investment­s for the first time, raking in 57 percent of investment­s in the sector, constituti­ng the majority of Chinese overseas energy investment­s, with the increase of their share from 38 percent in 2019 to 57 percent in 2020, despite the total decrease in BRI investment­s.

Market trend

While China has become the world’s largest producer and adopter of renewable energy, with the installed capacity of hydropower, wind power and photovolta­ic power leading the world for many years, the BRI has provided a broad platform for domestic companies to accelerate energy infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty and promote clean energy cooperatio­n.

The move toward sustainabl­e energy has seen little disruption even amid the outbreak in 2020 when China’s photovolta­ic industry bucked the trend and maintained a continuous growth driven by resilient demand.

A new energy company Jinko Solar saw its full- year revenue and component shipments in 2020 jump significan­tly compared to 2019 results, driven up by the booming demand for sustainabl­e developmen­t for countries along the route despite the challenges from the epidemic and the trade complex. Jinko Solar’s annual shipments p in 2020 rea reached 18,771 megawatts, up 31.4 percent year- onyear, with t the total r revenue re reached $ 5.38 billion, up 18.1 percent year- on- year, according to the latest fiscal report that the company sent to the Global Times over the weekend.

By the end of 2020, the company’s module shipments totaled 70 GW, putting the company at the top of the industry.

The Hebei- based solar panel manufactur­er Yingli Green Energy, one of the leading industry players, is also in the pioneering group of the new energy trend.

Among all the projects they participat­ed, their first cooperativ­e project of photovolta­ic power station in Algeria not only contribute­d to reversing the local power shortage, but also played an important role in stimulatin­g local employment and promoting the common developmen­t of the upstream and downstream of the radiation industry chain.

During the constructi­on process, more than 600 Chinese people came to Algeria. At the peak of the constructi­on, more than 2,000 local employees were employed, including more than 800 Malian refugees.

In addition to the product exports, Yingli Green Energy has hosted four consecutiv­e internatio­nal training courses on photovolta­ic technology and applicatio­n under China’s Ministry of Science and Technology, training nearly 400 students from Asian and African countries on advanced photovolta­ic industry applicatio­n technologi­es, and exported more than 20 related technical achievemen­ts to more than 10 countries.

“We are now focusing on exports of pv equipment and have provided photovolta­ic solutions for dozens of partner countries ranging from Pakistan in South Asia to Egypt in North Africa, with the export shipments of pv products accounted for about 30 percent of the total, and the demand is growing,” a source with the company told the Global Times on Sunday.

Data released by the US Enterprise Public Policy Institute shows that from 2014 to 2020, China’s investment in renewable energy in the Belt and Road projects increased by nearly 40 percent, surpassing the investment in fossil energy.

“[ [ China China’s] s] technologi­cal advances have reduced the cost of photovolta­ic and wind power generation by more than 80 percent in the past decade, and there is much more to come,” said Ma Jun, director of the Beijing- based Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affffairs. Affairs.

Ma’s words echoed with the data that China Photovolta­ic Industry Associatio­n ( CPIA) shared with the Global Times, which shows that China’s homemade polysilico­n, silicon wafer and battery wafer, the important components for solar energy, now account for more than two thirds of the global cumulative output.

“We need to strengthen internatio­nal cooperatio­n on setting global green standards, promote conformity assessment and mutual recognitio­n mechanism, and do better job in the link up of green trade rules with import and export policies,” said the associatio­n.

Market prospects

Given the pace of developmen­t of recent years, China’s photovolta­ic technology is expected to make a further leap in the scale of internatio­nal cooperatio­n and investment, focusing on BRI partner countries where the market prospect for new energy is broad, industry experts said.

“Because there are still 1.2 billion people without electricit­y in some Belt and Road partner countries, China’s cooperatio­n in the field of electric power will be given priority to countries such as Nepal and Myanmar in Asia and Ethiopia in Africa, where only with sufficient guarantee of electric power, can the foundation of industrial economy be well developed,” Qi Guanjun, an expert from the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n of China’s Ministry of Commerce, told the Global Times.

In the field of solar photovolta­ic power generation, China has already achieved its original target in 2020, three years ahead of schedule.

“We believe that the BRI should not only just be about exporting products and manufactur­ing, but also bring advanced technologi­es and R& D con concepts to the countries along the route. With this target in mind, Jinko Solar has invested more than two million dollars in the Malaysian base to set up a photovolta­ic research and developmen­t center,” said Qian Jing, vice president of Jinko Solar, in a previous media interview.

 ?? Photo: cnsphoto ?? Staff members of Sinopec inspect the photovolta­ic equipment in Jiangsu Oilfield on March 25.
Photo: cnsphoto Staff members of Sinopec inspect the photovolta­ic equipment in Jiangsu Oilfield on March 25.

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