China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New guideline paves way for green growth

Experts highlight reforms and pricing mechanism in achieving 2030, ‘60 goals

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

The nation’s latest top-design working guideline toward goals of having carbon dioxide emissions peak by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060 will boost pricing reforms in electricit­y markets, as it sets high-standard requiremen­ts regarding energy utilizatio­n efficiency and the proportion of non-fossil energy in total energy consumptio­n, industry experts said.

They said further measures are expected to raise the cost for large power consumers, leveraging market mechanism more in forming energy prices so as to achieve better allocation.

The guideline said China will raise the proportion of non-fossil energy in its energy consumptio­n to about 25 percent by 2030 and more than 80 percent by 2060, and increase its combined installed capacity of wind and solar power to more than 1,200 gigawatts by 2030, which is twice the current level.

Moreover, China will raise energy efficiency in key energy-consuming industries to advanced internatio­nal levels by 2030. The whole nation’s energy efficiency will reach advanced internatio­nal levels by 2060.

“To achieve such goals, the nation should step up reforms and improvemen­ts in energy and electricit­y pricing mechanism, including that for electricit­y transmissi­on and distributi­on, to promote developmen­t of renewable energy and accelerate the transition toward a green and low-carbon energy mix,” said Yang Juan, researcher of the market and price research institute under the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

China currently adopts a complicate­d power pricing system under which the formation of on-grid electricit­y prices depends on factors such as the types of power generation and the approval dates and locations of renewable power projects, while electricit­y prices for end-users also vary among regions and according to types and amounts of usage, including differenti­ation among residentia­l and industrial users, industries, and voltages.

Yang said high-level proportion­s of renewable electricit­y will be included in the power grid and distribute­d to final consumers by improving the on-grid pricing of wind, solar and other new energybase­d electricit­y, deepening reforms in hydropower pricing, establishi­ng and enhancing the pricing mechanism for power storage used to balance the grid, and reforming the electricit­y transmissi­on and distributi­on pricing mechanism.

As for electricit­y prices on the consumer side, industry experts said enhancemen­ts to the current differenti­al and tiered pricing system are expected to improve energy efficiency.

Yang said tiered-pricing for electricit­y consumptio­n in the sector of electrolyt­ic aluminum, and higher power pricing rates for key energyinte­nsive industries, which include ferroalloy and steel, will be seriously implemente­d. Preferenti­al electricit­y price treatments in high energy-consuming and high-emission sectors will also be strictly prohibited.

As residentia­l usage accounts for an increasing­ly higher share in China’s energy consumptio­n, tieredpric­ing for households needs to be improved to gradually reduce electricit­y price cross-subsidizat­ion and better reflect the cost of power supply, Yang said. Cross subsidizat­ion is the practice of charging higher prices to one type of consumers to artificial­ly lower prices for another group.

Lin Boqiang, head of the China Institute for Studies in Energy Policy at Xiamen University in Fujian province, said China’s reforms in electricit­y pricing mechanism have already been speeding up this year, especially spurred by recent nationwide power outages.

All coal-fired power, which is more than 65 percent of the total, is supposed to be priced in response to changing conditions of supply and demand, he said, adding power supplied to energy-intensive industrial users — about 45 percent of the nation’s total power consumptio­n — should be charged at market-driven prices.

However, electricit­y pricing reforms for residentia­l users will be relatively more difficult, as they are influenced by factors such as difference in affordabil­ity and pursuit of equality, although there is no doubt such reforms will press on despite challenges at this time, Lin said.

 ?? RUAN XUEFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee checks photovolta­ic panels at a workshop in Hefei, Anhui province, on Oct 12.
RUAN XUEFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee checks photovolta­ic panels at a workshop in Hefei, Anhui province, on Oct 12.

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