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5 Things You May Not Know About China's Energy Infrastructure
Jul 10, 2014 Deming Xiao
For China to meet its increasing demand for energy due to industrial expansion and urban population growth,it will need to fully modernise its energy infrastructure. This investment is expected to total $600 billion over the next decade.
This aggressive investment has already begun, with an emphasis placed on renewable energy. This fits with China’s efforts, as the world’s biggest carbon emitter, to reduce carbon emissions. Due to the nature of such a large undertaking, which must meet the energy demands of 1.4 billion people and a territory stretching 9.3 million square kilometres, China is hitting many records in the scale involved in the development of it energy infrastructure.
1. The government plans to develop 27 gigawatts of wind power capacity in 2015
Starting in 2011, China's National Energy Administration has approved, in four instalments, wind projects totalling more than 100GW in generating capacity; the equivalent of the UK electrical grid
2. China's largest LNG project supplies an estimated 2 million cubic meters of LNG per day and 481,100 tons annually
The HuaQi Ansai facility, which was inaugurated in August 2012, coverts Ansai's rich natural gas resources to LNG before the gas is transported over long distances.
3. By 2020, China plans to expand its LNG carrier fleet to 80 or more vessels
Currently, China has a LNG carrier fleet of 10 vessels and by 2015 expects to have 11 LNG receiving terminals.
4. China will spend $294 billion on renewable energy development by 2015
As a part of the China’s efforts to counter climate change, the government plans to develop more than 35 gigawatts of solar power capacity by 2015.
5. Every year China builds the equivalent of the UK electrical grid
The UK electrical grid, with almost 100GW installed, is by no means small. The fact that China is building this much electrical infrastructure year-on-year shows the enormous economic growth the country is experiencing and the sheer scale of its energy infrastructure projects.
- See more at: 5 Things You May Not Know About China's Energy Infrastructure | Power Conversion
Jul 10, 2014 Deming Xiao
For China to meet its increasing demand for energy due to industrial expansion and urban population growth,it will need to fully modernise its energy infrastructure. This investment is expected to total $600 billion over the next decade.
This aggressive investment has already begun, with an emphasis placed on renewable energy. This fits with China’s efforts, as the world’s biggest carbon emitter, to reduce carbon emissions. Due to the nature of such a large undertaking, which must meet the energy demands of 1.4 billion people and a territory stretching 9.3 million square kilometres, China is hitting many records in the scale involved in the development of it energy infrastructure.
1. The government plans to develop 27 gigawatts of wind power capacity in 2015
Starting in 2011, China's National Energy Administration has approved, in four instalments, wind projects totalling more than 100GW in generating capacity; the equivalent of the UK electrical grid
2. China's largest LNG project supplies an estimated 2 million cubic meters of LNG per day and 481,100 tons annually
The HuaQi Ansai facility, which was inaugurated in August 2012, coverts Ansai's rich natural gas resources to LNG before the gas is transported over long distances.
3. By 2020, China plans to expand its LNG carrier fleet to 80 or more vessels
Currently, China has a LNG carrier fleet of 10 vessels and by 2015 expects to have 11 LNG receiving terminals.
4. China will spend $294 billion on renewable energy development by 2015
As a part of the China’s efforts to counter climate change, the government plans to develop more than 35 gigawatts of solar power capacity by 2015.
5. Every year China builds the equivalent of the UK electrical grid
The UK electrical grid, with almost 100GW installed, is by no means small. The fact that China is building this much electrical infrastructure year-on-year shows the enormous economic growth the country is experiencing and the sheer scale of its energy infrastructure projects.
- See more at: 5 Things You May Not Know About China's Energy Infrastructure | Power Conversion