China Daily

Inner Mongolia sets renewable energy targets

Region plans to generate more clean electricit­y than coal power by 2030

- By YUAN HUI and HOU LIQIANG Contact the writers at houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The Inner Mongolia autonomous region, one of the country’s largest coal producers, has unveiled an ambitious action plan to peak its carbon dioxide emissions before 2030, vowing to generate more renewable energy than coal-fired power by 2030.

The action plan, unveiled on Friday, positively contribute­s to the country’s climate targets of peaking CO2 emissions before the end of this decade and realizing carbon neutrality before 2060.

By 2025, the installed capacity for renewable energy generation in the region will exceed that for coal-fired power, according to the action plan. By the end of this decade, such renewable energy capacity will reach 200 million kilowatts, almost nine times the capacity of the Three Gorges Dam in Hubei province.

The hydropower station with the largest capacity in the world, the Three Gorges’ electricit­y generating capacity stands at 22.5 million kilowatts.

Inner Mongolia will strive to build a national demonstrat­ion zone for a modern renewable energy economy, the document said. The priority in the work is to promote the constructi­on of largescale bases for wind and solar energy developmen­t.

In 2019, nonfossil energy accounted for 8.1 percent of Inner Mongolia’s energy consumptio­n. The region will endeavor to lift the proportion to 18 percent in 2025 and then to 25 percent by 2030.

Inner Mongolia will also beef up efforts to transmit more renewable energy to other regions. For new cross-regional power lines, at least 50 percent of their transmissi­on should be from renewables.

According to a media release from the Inner Mongolia regional government, it will introduce more preferenti­al policies to promote green transition.

Tax preference­s will be introduced to motivate energy and water conservati­on, as well as the comprehens­ive utilizatio­n of resources, it said. The region will encourage financial institutio­ns to offer favorable interest rates for projects that can prominentl­y reduce carbon emissions.

In recent years, Inner Mongolia has made significan­t progress in boosting its renewable energy sector.

A solar photovolta­ic device factory with a total investment of 30 billion yuan ($4.18 billion) in Ordos is expected to start production in mid-2023 and reach full production capacity by the end of 2024.

Once the plant goes into full production, the combined annual power generation capacity of the solar photovolta­ic products will be roughly equivalent to that of two Three Gorges Dams, local authoritie­s said.

Developed by Longi Green Energy Technology Co, the world’s leading supplier of solar PV solutions, the factory is projected to generate 70 billion yuan in revenue annually.

“Once completed, it will be the world’s largest individual solar photovolta­ic manufactur­ing base,” said Zhu Penghao, the project’s general manager.

The plant is located in a zerocarbon industrial park, which aims to build a zero-carbon energy supply system with help of the Internet of Things and big data, according to local authoritie­s. Power supply in the park will be completely zero-carbon by the end of 2023.

 ?? SONG WEIXING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Electricia­ns inspect a photovolta­ic power generation array in Dalad Banner, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, in July.
SONG WEIXING / FOR CHINA DAILY Electricia­ns inspect a photovolta­ic power generation array in Dalad Banner, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, in July.

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