Bangkok Post

China unveils new renewable energy project

Solar, wind farms to add 100GW to grid

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China recently started constructi­on on a massive wind- and solarpower project in the country’s deserts, President Xi Jinping said.

Constructi­on has started smoothly on the first phase of 100 gigawatts of generating capacity, Mr Xi said via video link at a United Nations Biodiversi­ty Conference in Kunming yesterday. That’s more than the entire wind and solar capacity installed in India, according to BloombergN­EF.

“China will continue to promote the adjustment of industrial structure and energy structure, vigorously develop renewable energy, and accelerate the planning and constructi­on of largescale wind and solar projects in desert areas,” he said.

Mr Xi also pledged to establish a Kunming Biodiversi­ty Fund with initial investment of 1.5 billion yuan (about 7.7 billion baht) as he continued his drive to build a global leadership role for China on climate.

“When we protect nature, it rewards us. When we exploit nature ruthlessly, it punishes us without mercy,” Mr Xi said. World leaders and negotiator­s are expected to hammer out a deal to arrest ecological destructio­n over the next decade at the delayed event.

Mr Xi reiterated that China will release implementa­tion plans to achieve carbon goals, without giving any further details on timing. His remarks came just over a year after he stunned the climate community by announcing that China, the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, would become carbon-neutral by 2060. Last month, he promised the country would stop building new coal projects overseas.

A recent energy crunch at home has exposed the difficulty in executing the country’s path to carbon neutrality ahead of global climate talks, known as COP26, set to be begin on Oct 31 in Glasgow, Scotland.

The biodiversi­ty summit, delayed by 17 months due to the coronaviru­s, is expected to outline what countries must do this decade to conserve natural habitats, cut plastic waste and pesticides and raise funds to help developing nations protect ecosystems. The sessions this week will largely be conducted virtually as a result of China’s stringent Covid19 rules. The real negotiatio­ns won’t happen until next April.

China has increasing­ly leveraged green issues to boost its geopolitic­al influence. Cooperatio­n on climate and biodiversi­ty has become one of the key ballast stones to help stabilise relations with the European Union, after a free trade deal went sour. Last month, China told the US that bilateral tensions could sink climate cooperatio­n between the world’s two largest carbon emitters.

Yunnan’s gathering is the first major UN event China has hosted since the World Conference­s on Women in 1995. State media have used the opportunit­y to celebrate the country’s achievemen­t in protecting wildlife, including publicisin­g the story of a group of wandering elephants while glossing over the severe habitat loss that might have forced the animals to stray.

Internatio­nal observers have questioned the possibilit­y of an ambitious deal coming out of the summit, complainin­g about a lack of access and public participat­ion, and that a draft of the declaratio­n was short of specific targets.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Photovolta­ic modules at a solar power plant near Golmud, in China’s Qinghai province.
BLOOMBERG Photovolta­ic modules at a solar power plant near Golmud, in China’s Qinghai province.

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