Lianyungang: China last year began
construction on projects with the greatest combined coal power capacity since
2015, jeopardising the country's goal to peak carbon emissions by 2030,
according to a report published Thursday.
The world's second-largest economy
is the biggest emitter of the greenhouse gases that drive climate change, but
also a renewable energy powerhouse. It plans to reach net zero by 2060.
While coal has been a pivotal energy
source in China for decades, explosive growth in wind and solar installations
in recent years has raised hopes that the country can wean itself off the dirty
fossil fuel.
According to a report from the Finland-based
Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) and Global Energy Monitor
(GEM) in the United States, China began construction on 94.5 gigawatts of coal
power projects in 2024 -- 93 per cent of the global total.
Although the country also added a
record 356 gigawatts of wind and solar capacity -- 4.5 times the European
Union's additions -- the uptick in coal power risks solidifying its role in
China's energy mix, the report said.
"China's rapid expansion of
renewable energy has the potential to reshape its power system, but this
opportunity is being undermined by the simultaneous large-scale expansion of
coal power," said Qi Qin, lead author of the report and China analyst at
CREA.
The rise comes despite a pledge by
Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2021 to "strictly control" coal power
projects and increases in coal consumption before "phasing it down"
between 2026 and 2030.
Coal production has risen steadily
in recent years, from 3.9 billion tons in 2020 to 4.8 billion tons in 2024.
"Without urgent policy shifts, China risks reinforcing a pattern of energy
addition rather than transition, limiting the full potential of its clean
energy boom," the report said.
Coal prioritised
New permits for coal power projects
fell 83 per cent in the first half of 2024, prompting optimism that China's
clean energy transition was gathering pace. In November, a survey of experts by
CREA and the Australian think tank International Society for Energy Transition
Studies (ISETS) found that 52 per cent thought China's coal consumption would
peak in 2025.
But coal power surged in the latter
months of 2024, despite the country adding enough power from clean energy
sources to cover its growth in electricity demand. That suggested coal power
was being prioritised over renewable sources in some regions, the report said.
"Chinese coal power and mining
companies are sponsoring and building new coal plants beyond what is
needed," said Christine Shearer, research analyst at GEM. "The
continued pursuit of coal is crowding out the country's use of lower-cost clean
energy."
China is due to announce details of
its 15th Five-Year Plan -- for 2026 to 2030 -- in the coming months, likely
including updated emissions and energy goals. This month it was also due to
submit new emissions targets, known as Nationally Determined Contributions
(NDCs), under the 2015 Paris Agreement.
So far only a handful of countries
have submitted new NDCs. In October, CREA urged China to set a "strong but
achievable" target of slashing emissions by at least 30 per cent by 2035.