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Coal power in China

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Coal power in China

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In the People's Republic of China**,** electricity generated from coal represents over half of all electricity generated in the country. It is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions by China.

China's installed coal-based power generation capacity was 1080 GW in 2021, about half the total installed capacity of power stations in China. Coal-fired power stations generated 57% of electricity in 2020. Over half the world's coal-fired power is generated in China. 5 GW of new coal power was approved in the first half of 2021. Quotas force utility companies to buy coal power over cheaper renewable power. China is the largest producer and consumer of coal in the world and is the largest user of coal-derived electricity. Despite China (like other G20 countries) pledging in 2009 to end inefficient fossil fuel subsidies, there are direct subsidies and the main way coal power is favored is by the rules guaranteeing its purchase – so dispatch order is not merit order.

The think tank Carbon Tracker estimated in 2020 that the average coal fleet loss was about 4 USD/MWh and that about 60% of power stations were cashflow negative in 2018 and 2019.{{Cite report

Coal is the main source of electricity but its share is declining

To curtail the continued rapid construction of coal fired power plants, strong action was taken in April 2016 by the National Energy Administration (NEA), which issued a directive curbing construction in many parts of the country. This was followed up in January 2017 when the NEA canceled a further 103 coal power plants, eliminating 120 GW of future coal-fired capacity, despite the resistance of local authorities mindful of the need to create jobs. The decreasing rate of construction is due to the realization that too many power plants had been built and some existing plants were being used far below capacity. In 2020 over 40% of plants were estimated to be running at a net loss and new plants may become stranded assets. In 2021 some plants were reported close to bankruptcy due to being forbidden to raise electricity prices in line with high coal prices.

Falling capacity factors are forcing Chinese coal generation to take on an untypical role of peaker plants (outside of China gas-fired plants provide this capability, but Chinese authorities don't wish to be dependent of foreign gas). In February 2024 the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) announced upgrading coal plants for more effective flexible operation and developing the gas generation where local resources are available.

As part of China's efforts to achieve its pledges of peak coal consumption by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060, a nationwide effort to reduce overcapacity resulted in the closure of many small and dirty coal mines. Major coal-producing provinces like Shaanxi, Inner Mongolia, and Shanxi instituted administrative caps on coal output. These measures contributed to electricity outages in several northeastern provinces in September 2021 and a coal shortage elsewhere in China. The NDRC responded by relaxing some environmental standards and the government allowed coal-fired power plants to defer tax payments. Trade policy was adjusted to allow importing a small amount of coal from Australia. The energy problems abated in a few weeks.

In 2023, The Economist wrote:

References

References

  1. (2021-08-25). "Chinese coal plant approvals slum after Xi climate pledge".
  2. Yihe, Xu. (2021-09-01). "China curbs coal-fired power expansion, giving way to renewables".
  3. Cheng, Evelyn. (2021-04-29). "China has 'no other choice' but to rely on coal power for now, official says".
  4. (2021-03-29). "China generated half of global coal power in 2020: study".
  5. "Why China is struggling to wean itself from coal".
  6. (June 2020). "How to Retire Early: Making accelerated coal phaseout feasible and just". [[Carbon Tracker]].
  7. (December 2020). "China's New Growth Pathway: From the 14th Five-Year Plan to Carbon Neutrality". Energy Foundation China.
  8. (2023-08-29). "China's new coal power spree continues as more provinces jump on the bandwagon".
  9. Lushan, Huang. (2023-11-23). "China's new capacity payment risks locking in coal".
  10. (2021-09-24). "Sunsetting coal power in China". iScience.
  11. (2023). "Retired Coal-fired Power Capacity by Country / Global Coal Plant Tracker". Global Energy Monitor.
  12. (5 April 2023). "Boom and Bust Coal / Tracking the Global Coal Plant Pipeline". Global Energy Monitor.
  13. (2023). "New Coal-fired Power Capacity by Country / Global Coal Plant Tracker". Global Energy Monitor.
  14. (7 April 2016). "China Puts an Emergency Stop on Coal Power Construction".
  15. Forsythe, Michael. (2017-01-18). "China Cancels 103 Coal Plants, Mindful of Smog and Wasted Capacity". [[The New York Times]].
  16. (Mar 22, 2016). "Asian coal boom: climate threat or mirage?". [[Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit]].
  17. "China's Carbon Neutral Opportunity".
  18. (2021-09-10). "Beijing power companies close to bankruptcy petition for price hikes".
  19. Ritchie, Hannah. (2024-02-14). "China is building more coal plants but might burn less coal".
  20. (2023-01-15). "Identification of key influencing factors to Chinese coal power enterprises transition in the context of carbon neutrality: A modified fuzzy DEMATEL approach". Energy.
  21. (2024-05-01). "Optimal coal power phase-out pathway considering high renewable energy proportion: A provincial example". Energy Policy.
  22. "China to build hydro and gas, upgrade coal fleet for a more flexible power system". Reuters.
  23. Zhang, Angela Huyue. (2024). "High Wire: How China Regulates Big Tech and Governs Its Economy". [[Oxford University Press]].
  24. (27 November 2023). "Will China save the planet or destroy it?". [[The Economist]].
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