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China’s wind and solar power generation capacity to surpass coal in 2024

02 Feb 2024

 

China’s installed capacity for wind and solar energy will exceed that of coal for the first time by the end of this year, according to an estimate made by the country’s power trade association, as the country remains on track towards sourcing 80 per cent of its energy needs from non-fossil fuel sources by 2060, when it plans to be carbon-neutral.

Non-fossil energy, which includes nuclear and hydropower, already accounts for over half of the power generating capacity in the world’s second-biggest economy.

The country’s grid-connected wind and solar power generation capacity could exceed 1,300 gigawatts (GW) by the end of this year, with about 530GW of capacity coming from wind, and 780GW from solar, the China Electricity Council (CEC) said in a report on Tuesday.

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This could boost the share of wind and solar power to 40 per cent in China’s total installed power generation capacity by the end of 2024, up from 36 per cent at the end of 2023, according to CEC.

In 2023, the total installed capacity of power from non-fossil fuel sources, including renewables, nuclear and hydropower, had exceeded 50 per cent of the total generation capacity for the first time, according to CEC. By the end of 2024, the cumulative capacity of non-fossil fuel power is expected to reach 1,860GW or 57 per cent of the total capacity, it said.

 

China will work toward having 80 per cent of its total energy mix from non-fossil fuel sources by 2060, when the nation aims to be carbon neutral.

Meanwhile, the share of coal-fired power is expected to fall to 37 per cent of the total installed capacity by the end of 2024, from 39.9 per cent in 2023, the CEC report forecast.

China’s clean energy boom ‘an example to the entire world’, IEA analyst says

“Judging from the investments, growth rate of power-generation capacity and changes in power structures, the power industry continues to advance the trend of green and low-carbon transformation,” said Hao Yingjie, secretary general of the CEC. China is the world’s biggest producer of climate-warming greenhouse gases and the power sector is the largest contributor to these emissions.