China has broken ground on a renewable energy project worth an estimated $11 billion in the province of Inner Mongolia. The project will have a capacity of 16 GW and produce some 40 billion kWh of electricity to Beijing and the provinces of Tianjin and Hebei. The project will combine solar, wind, and upgraded coal power, and is set to become the largest renewable energy project in a desert region.
The Kubuqi Desert, where the project will be located, is already home to a massive solar farm comprising 196,000 panels on 1.4 million square meters. The project has already generated some 2.3 billion kWh.
China is the country with the greatest wind and solar generation capacity and it has one of the most ambitious investment programs for renewables, despite its still-heavy reliance on fossil fuels.
As of 2021, China’s renewable power generation capacity stood at 1,063 GW and represented close to 45 percent of the country’s total generation capacity. Per government plans, China should be producing 33 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2025 and it is close to that target, with the figure for 2021 at 29.4 percent.
Plans are to expand wind and solar capacity to 1,200 GW by 2030, as Beijing plans peak emissions by that year. Currently, China is the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases.
Tags: Beijing, China, Fossil Fuels, Renewable Energy
Recent Posts
ONGC launches four new eco-friendly cementing units
SGL partners with Hapag-Lloyd for ocean biofuel initiative
LR to work with Stena to retrofit two Stena Line ferries to methanol
Ports in Baltic Sea cut emissions with port collaboration solution
ADNOC delivers certified bulk commercial shipment to Mitsui
Oceania, Hexagon partner for low emission ammonia bunkering
SRK achieves net zero certification in global diamond sector
Banle Energy takes part in Tata Steel B24 bio bunker fuel voyage