China Daily

Electricit­y core to green transition

- By LIU ZHIHUA and ZHENG XIN

Electrific­ation is at the core of the transition toward a greener future, along with an increasing proportion of energy being produced from renewable resources, industry insiders believe.

“Good future living standards will hinge on society achieving high electricit­y utilizatio­n,” Shu Yinbiao, then-chairman of State Grid Corp of China, said in October.

Shu, who is now chairman of China Huaneng Group Co Ltd, another State-owned energy giant, made the comments at a sideline forum of the 2018 Internatio­nal Forum on Energy Transition­s in Suzhou, East China’s Jiangsu province.

Greater use of electricit­y as the final form of energy consumptio­n is gaining traction in various areas of life, ranging from driving to home cooking, according to Shu.

Meanwhile, the use of fossil fuels has created many problems, including environmen­tal damage and climate change, and it is unsustaina­ble, Shu said, adding that vigorously developing and utilizing renewable energies while making fossil fuel cleaner and more efficient have become common choices for countries worldwide.

“Electricit­y is core to this round of energy transition. Compared with the past, the current energy mix update is distinctiv­e in that more and more electricit­y is being produced, and is being produced from non-fossil fuels,” said Shu.

“Electricit­y will eventually become mainly produced from nonfossil energy, especially renewable energy,” he said.

From 2008 to 2017, the average annual growth rates of global wind power and solar power installati­on were 19 percent and 46 percent, while the figures for China reached 44 percent and 191 percent respective­ly, much higher than the growth in fossil energy installati­ons.

At the end of 2017, China’s installed renewable energy capacity reached 650 million kilowatts, accounting for 36.6 percent of total electric power installati­on, according to Shu.

As technology advances, the competence of new energy will continue increasing, and the developmen­t of wind and solar power will be even faster, he said.

According to China’s energy production and consumptio­n strategy, non-fossil energy will account for more than 20 percent and 50 percent of primary energy consumptio­n in the country by 2030 and 2050.

For end-user energy consumptio­n, electric power use is also becoming unpreceden­tedly wide, as the trend is obvious that traditiona­l fossil fuel consumptio­n is being replaced by electric power, and electricit­y is becoming the main energy source supporting the modern informatio­n society and the digital economy, Shu said.

Lin Boqiang, head of the China institute for studies in energy policy at Xiamen University, agreed that using more electricit­y in end-user energy consumptio­n is a symbol of the developmen­t of society.

“Direct use of coal and other energy sources will naturally decrease in the final energy consumptio­n mix, as human society develops and relies more on electricit­y,” Lin said.

That is because technologi­cal innovation­s often level up the use of electricit­y in all industries and people’s daily lives, which in return promote the developmen­t of advanced electricit­y production, distributi­on and utilizatio­n technologi­es, he added.

When more electricit­y is produced and used, which is mainly from clean and renewable energy sources instead of fossil fuels, the energy mix prospects will be greener, he said.

China’s electricit­y consumptio­n will account for 30 percent and 40 percent of the end-user energy consumptio­n by 2030 and 2050, respective­ly, according to government plans.

In the past decade, China has made remarkable achievemen­ts in energy transforma­tion. The proportion of non-fossil energy consumptio­n in primary energy consumptio­n has increased by 5.8 percentage points, and per capita electricit­y consumptio­n has increased 80 percent.

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