Site Search :
查查英汉在线翻译
Newsmore
·Fifth Ministerial Conference of Forum on China-Africa Cooperation Held in Beijing
·Drug Fight Confronted with More Challenges
·Senior CPC Leader Returns to Beijing after Four-country Visit
Culturemore
·Calligraphy, Then and Now
·Lotus Painter Cai Qibao
·The Olympic Ideal
Tourismmore
·Riverside Romance in Central Anhui
·Into the Wild – Hiking through Qizang Valley
·Folklore Flying High in Weifang
Economymore
·China’s Soft Power: Room for Improvement
·Browse, Click, Buy - Domestic Consumers Head Overseas with Online Shopping
·A Private Company’s Road to Internationalization
Lifemore
·Zhang Jiao, Ardent Advocate of Afforestation and Green Farming
·First Single Children Come of Age
·E-Government: Open, Approachable Government Websites
Around Chinamore
·Scientists Uncover Causes of Mass Extinction in the Ashes
·Kaili -- Scenery, Music and Southern Charm
·Ningxia: Putting Money Down on Culture
Special Report  

A Green Grid Rolls Off the Blueprint

In the wilds: construction site of the Changma Wind Farm.

    The Renewable Energy Law of 2006 has put the development of China's new energy industry onto the fast track. Government investment in this sector has grown at an annual rate of 20 percent over the past few years. In 2008 support for new energy enterprises reached RMB 3.8 billion. This is just the beginning for this industry.

    The government has laid out a series of green energy development plans and kicked off some large-scale projects this year, including a 10-million-kW wind and tidal power station referred to as the "Maritime Three Gorges Project" in East China's Jiangsu Province, a 12..71-million-kW "Terrestrial Three Gorges" wind power project in Northwest China's Gansu, and China's first 10,000-kW photovoltaic grid, also in Gansu Province. Meanwhile, the world's largest hydro-generator with a total installed capacity of 18.2 million kW at the Yangtze River Three Gorges has passed its final acceptance test.

    China plans to increase the share of renewable energy in the total amount of energy consumption from the current 9 percent to around 40 percent by 2050. According to Wang Jun, director of the New and Renewable Energy Department of the National Energy Bureau, this is not merely expediency in the face of unpredictable oil prices on the international market. More important than that, the application of green energy will reduce greenhouse gas emissions and have a significant impact on global climate change.

    At the UN climate change summit held in New York this past September 22, President Hu Jintao stated that China would exert great effort to develop renewable energy and nuclear energy and increase the share of non-fossil fuels in primary energy consumption to around 15 percent by 2020.

-----------------------------------

All reports can be viewed at:

High on Wind Power

Biomass Energy: An Indispensable Link in the Circular Economy

The Big Green Machine

On China's Green Energy Development Strategy

Global Lessons in Green Development

 

VOL.59 NO.12 December 2010 Advertise on Site Contact Us