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China gas supplies to exceed 360 bln cubic meters
(Xinhua) 09:40, December 11, 2016

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A natural gas power plant in China. [Photo: Xinhua]

China's natural gas supplies will exceed 360 billion cubic meters by 2020, a report forecast Saturday.

Stable supplies and relatively well-developed infrastructure have buoyed the fast growth of the gas market, according to a report jointly issued by the National Energy Administration, the Development Research Center of the State Council and the Ministry of Land Resources.

Currently, consumers in all 31 provincial-level regions have access to natural gas.

The report said the country is rich in natural gas, holding 90 trillion cubic meters of conventional resources.

China's natural gas output rose from 50 billion cubic meters in 2005 to 135 billion cubic meters last year,

Gas is China's fastest growing major fuel, and demand has been boosted by price cuts aimed at switching users from coal to cleaner fuels.

It accounts for around 7 percent of China's energy production, with a national target to exceed 10 percent by 2020.
 
CNOOC buys two blocks in oil auction
2016-12-08 09:45 | China Daily | Editor: Xu Shanshan

Energy reform in Mexico opens market for first time in the nation for almost 80 years

CNOOC, China's largest offshore oil and natural gas producer, has strengthened its investment in Mexico's energy sector by buying two deepwater oil blocks at auction.

China National Offshore Oil Corp has won two of the 10 blocks on offer, one of them just 6.5 kilometers from the maritime border with the US, with bids that far outstripped the minimum required, according to the State-owned company.

The first offer was nearly six times the minimum required, and the second was almost as high, the company said.

The deepwater oil blocks are considered a "jewel in the crown" by the Mexican government. The auction was part of the country's energy reform that is opening a sector that has been closed to private exploration and production for nearly 80 years.

According to Li Li, energy research director with ICIS China, Mexico's energy opening, which is meant to revitalize the country's oil and gas industry, is good news for Chinese companies, as the country is listed as the 12th largest oil producer with rich oil and gas resources.

"Mexico's plan to tender deepwater exploration blocks in the Gulf of Mexico, open to foreign and private companies, is a good outcome for the country, given the low-price environment for oil and gas," said Li.

"It will further help Mexico open up its energy sectors. And, foreign companies, including the Chinese State-owned companies like CNOOC, will have more development opportunities and a more comprehensive strategic layout in South America through the bidding."

CNOOC and other participants have rich experience in offshore oil exploitation, which will help Mexico better drill for the country's rich deep sea resources, she said.

According to the Mexican government, four of the 10 deepwater blocks being auctioned are located in the Perdido Fold belt, near the US side of the Gulf. Six are in the unexplored Salina basin further south.

Pedro Joaquin Coldwell, Mexico's energy secretary, said the Mexican government is delighted that China came to compete and win, saying the move helps boost the two nations' economic ties.

If this contributes to opening a new chapter in Sino-Mexican relations, that will be something else good to have come out of the energy reform, he said.

Mexico abruptly annulled a $3.6 billion high-speed rail contract won by a consortium led by China Railway Construction Corporation in 2014, which strained bilateral relations.

Duncan Wood, head of the Mexico Institute at the Wilson Center in Washington said in an interview with The Financial Times that this is a sign that Chinese firms really want to get involved here, despite China not yet being a major player in Mexico up to now.

In addition to CNOOC, a consortium made up of Norway's Statoil, BP and Total of France also won two contracts. Mexican oil company Sierra was part of consortiums that won two other licenses and a Chevron-led bid scooped another.

Total and ExxonMobil of the US also won one bid. Shell failed to win the only block it bid for.
 
Power Sector Reforms Announced in China’s 13th Five Year Plan

November 22, 2016

Nov. 7, 2016 - China’s National Development & Reform Commission along with the National Energy Administration (NDRC and NEA) jointly released the “13th Five Year Plan for Power Sector Development” marking 15 years since the last time a Five Year Plan was released on the development of China’s power sector. The last Five Year Plan for the power sector was released January 1, of 2001, as part of the “10th Five Year Plan.”

The NDRC estimates by 2020, Chinese electric power consumption will reach 6,800 TWh of electricity, increasing on average by 3.6-4.8% each year. The per capita use is expected to reach approximately 5,000 kWh by 2020. (According to World Bank data from 2014, this is on par with the current per capita rates from nations like Greece, Spain, and the United Kingdom.) With China’s growing needs for power and a 15% renewables target in mind, the plan calls for the following goals to be met over the next five years.

Hydropower
Add 40 GW hydropower capacity, with total installation reaching 340 GW by 2020.

Wind Power
Increase wind capacity by 79 GW, with total installed capacity of 210 GW by 2020, of which 5 GW will include offshore wind projects.

Solar
Add 68 GW of solar bringing total solar capacity to 110 GW by 2020, of which distributed solar will be 60 GW and thermal solar will be at 5 GW.

Nuclear
Put 30 GW nuclear power into operation, reaching total capacity of 58 GW by 2020. Due to safety concerns, priority given to construction in coastal regions.

Biofuels
Reach 15 GW of biofuels production by 2020.

Natural Gas
Increase natural gas capacity by 50 GW, by 2020 total capacity will be over 110 GW, with CCHP-coupled technology occupying 15GW.

Coal
Cancel/delay construction of coal plants over 150 GW in scale, capping coal generation capacity at 1,100 GW by 2020. Upgrade 420 GW of existing equipment with low-emissions technology, modify 340 GW of equipment to increase energy efficiency, and phasing out over 20 GW of old equipment. By 2020 all coal plants must waste less than 310g/kWh of coal.

System Upgrades
  • Promote a flexible electric system by increasing load shifting capabilities. Put into production 17 GW of pumped storage, bringing total pumped storage up to 40 GW.
  • In China's North, update 133 GW of capacity with thermoelectric technology and modify 82 GW of equipment with condensing units. Other locations will receive condensing unit upgrades totaling 4500 GW in capacity. After upgrades, the focus will be on increasing load-shifting capabilities by 46 GW, 45 GW in China's North.
  • Increase transmission capacity by 130 GW to send power from west to east, bringing long-distance transmission capacity to 270 GW by 2020.
  • Accelerate construction of electric vehicle charging stations, bringing total centralized charging stations over 12,000, and distributed charging stations over 4,800,000. Strengthen smart charging systems to satisfy the needs of China's expected 5,000,000 electric vehicles.
System Reforms
  • Before the end of 2016, complete a electric power market mechanism. After which, power market trials will begin.
  • Before the end of 2017, set electricity transmission and distribution prices.
  • Ancillary services pilot for China's Northeast began in 2016, once the pilot has matured, an ancillary services market will be implemented nation-wide.
  • Before the end of 2018, establish spot market pilots, with nation-wide implementation by 2020.
  • Before 2020 cancel preferential rights for electricity generators.
  • By the end of 2018, complete work to cultivate sell-side market competition mechanisms, encourage the launching of new electricity distribution services.
 
SGCC to build 120,000 charging piles to meet market demand
Source:Globaltimes.cn | Published: 2016/12/12 19:54:13


10,000 public charging stations and 120,000 charging piles are expected to be built by the State Grid Corporation of China (SGCC) before 2020 to meet the rapid development of the market for new energy vehicles.


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I look forward to the day when new energy vehicles (Electric Vehicles) overtake fossil fuel vehicles.
It's better for the environment.

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China's crude coal output sets record high in Nov.
Xinhua, December 15, 2016

China's crude coal output was the highest of the year in November as the coal shortage started to ease, official data showed Thursday.

Average daily output reached 10.3 million tonnes in November, up by 1.2 million tonnes from October and surpassing ten million tonnes for the first time this year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

Total crude coal output reached 310 million tonnes in November, down 5.1 percent year on year. The decline rate was 6.9 percentage points lower than a month earlier.

Coal prices ended a six-month long rising streak driven by supply cuts and rising demands in mid November, with a benchmark coal price falling by about 33 yuan (4.75 U.S. dollars) per tonne in November.

Meanwhile, above-scale industrial crude oil narrowed its output drop in November, while natural gas production reversed previous drops and started to grow.
 
Awesome. LOL at those fools questioning Chinese nuke tech. State of the art and highly advanced. Deal with it.
 
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China to install over 110 mln kw of solar power by 2020
Source: Xinhua 2016-12-17 19:54:24

BEIJING, Dec. 17 (Xinhua) -- China will install over 110 million kilowatts of solar power by 2020, according to the National Energy Administration (NEA).

The world's top energy consumer will install at least 105 million kilowatts of photovoltaic power capacity by 2020, according to the solar power development plan for the next five years released by NEA on Friday.

China will reduce the costs for producing photovoltaic power and lower its price by at least 50 percent compared with that of 2015, the plan added.

China produced the world's largest installed capacity of photovoltaic power in 2015, with an annual growth rate of over 33 percent from 2011 to 2015.

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Solar power project under construction above fishery water, E China
By Tian Shaohui (Xinhua) 10:12, December 25, 2016

A solar power project is under construction in Cixi City, east China's Zhejiang Province. The project, with solar panels installed above the fishery water, is expected to generate 220 million kwh of electricity per year.


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Aerial photo taken on Dec. 24, 2016 shows a solar power project under construction in Cixi City, east China's Zhejiang Province. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)

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A power worker patrols in an aquaculture farm building and sharing with a solar power project in Cixi City, east China's Zhejiang Province, Dec. 24, 2016. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)

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Aerial photo taken on Dec. 24, 2016 shows a solar power project under construction in Cixi City, east China's Zhejiang Province. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)

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Gulls hover over an aquaculture farm building and sharing with a solar power project in Cixi City, east China's Zhejiang Province, Dec. 24, 2016. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)

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Aerial photo taken on Dec. 24, 2016 shows a solar power project under construction in Cixi City, east China's Zhejiang Province. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)

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Aerial photo taken on Dec. 24, 2016 shows a solar power project under construction in Cixi City, east China's Zhejiang Province. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)

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Aerial photo taken on Dec. 24, 2016 shows a solar power project under construction in Cixi City, east China's Zhejiang Province. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)
 
China to cut 800 mln tonnes of coal capacity annually by 2020
2017-01-01 08:58 | Xinhua | Editor: Huang Mingrui

China aims to optimize the structure of its coal production by reducing outdated capacity and increasing the use of cleaner products.

The world's largest coal producer and consumer will cut outdated coal capacity by 800 million tonnes per year by 2020, while increasing use of cleaner coal by 500 million tonnes, according to the coal industry 2016-2020 development plan issued by the country's top economic planner.

Total coal output will stand at about 3.9 billion tonnes in 2020, compared with 3.75 billion tonnes in 2015, while China will consume 4.1 billion tonnes of coal, up from 3.96 billion tonnes in 2015.

There will be about 3,000 coal enterprises in 2020, mostly large companies, running about 6,000 collieries nationwide, with large-capacity coal mines the majority.

The plan also outlines targets to improve coal production safety and efficiency, as well as reducing impact on the environment.


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This is good news for the environment.
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Chinese Renewable Power Giant Builds Global Empire
By JOE MCDONALD, AP BUSINESS WRITER
BEIJING — Jan 4, 2017, 12:47 AM ET
The Associated Press

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In this Nov. 7, 2008 photo, people stand near electric pylons watching flow of water is discharged through the Three Gorges Dam in Yichang in central China's Hubei province. Three Gorges Group is spending heavily to buy or build hydro, wind and solar projects at a time when Western utility investors are pulling back and U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s pledge to revive coal use has raised doubt about U.S. support for renewables. (Chinatopix via AP)


Other investors are wary of Brazil, but when Duke Energy wanted to sell 10 hydroelectric dams there, a Chinese utility shrugged off the country's economic turmoil and paid $1.2 billion to add them to an energy empire that stretches from Malaysia to Germany to the Amazon.

State-owned China Three Gorges Group is spending heavily to buy or build hydro, wind and solar projects at a time when Western utility investors are pulling back and President-elect Donald Trump's pledge to revive coal use has raised doubt about U.S. support for renewables.

"They're happy to invest wherever they see value or they can gain a foothold," said Andrew Shepherd, who follows the global utility industry for BMI Research.​

Flush with cash and willing to tolerate risks that put off older rivals, CTG and other state-owned utilities including State Grid Corp., the world's biggest power supplier, are expanding abroad in search of new revenue sources as economic growth and electricity demand at home cool.

A decade ago, they built dams and power plants in Asia and Africa. Now, they also are taking on a longer-term role as operators of power companies in Europe and Australia and are looking at the U.S. market. They are providing welcome investment in troubled markets such as Brazil and southern Europe.

Set up in 1993 to run the vast Three Gorges Dam in central China, CTG is unusual in its status as a national-level Chinese power company with global ambitions but a reliance on non-fossil-fuels sources.

The company still gets most of its 60 gigawatts of generating capacity from dams. Its namesake 46-gigawatt facility on the Yangtze River competes with Brazil's Itaipu Dam for the title of world's biggest hydropower facility.

Such projects face a backlash over environmental damage and forced relocation of local communities.

In August, Brazil's environmental agency rejected a proposal by CTG and Portugal's national power company, Energias de Portugal, to build the 8-gigawatt Sao Luis do Tapajos Dam on the Amazon. The dam would have flooded land belonging to Munduruku Indians.

CTG, which says it is active in 40 countries, starting investing in wind power in 2007 and solar in 2011 — projects that are easier and more politically attractive.
  • In June, it bought a wind farm in Germany from Blackstone Energy Partners. A CTG-built dam in Malaysia started commercial generation in May. CTG has a joint venture with Australian startup RayGen Resources to set up solar projects in China.
  • In the past five years, CTG has spent more than $10 billion on hydro and wind assets in Brazil, Germany, Italy, Poland and Portugal, according to Dealogic, a financial data provider. It also has built a dam in neighboring Laos and a wind farm in Pakistan.
  • "Three Gorges Group takes building an international first-rate clean energy group as a strategic goal," the company said in a written response to questions. It said its European presence is a "development platform" for North America.
The ruling Communist Party is spending heavily on renewable energy to curb reliance on imported oil and gas and on coal, reduce eye-searing smog and create profitable technologies.

Not including large-scale hydroelectric dams, China invested $103 billion last year in wind, solar and other renewable sources, according to the U.N. Environment Program. The U.S. spent $44 billion.

Beijing's spending is nurturing Chinese export industries. The country's solar panel makers are global industry leaders and its wind turbine manufacturers are stepping up exports.

In the United States, CTG and other Chinese investors may face tougher scrutiny under Trump, who castigated Beijing during his campaign and has appointed advisers favoring a more antagonistic stance on trade.

And when it comes to acquiring U.S. assets, that market is crowded with experienced, deep-pocketed potential rivals such as Duke, Southern Company and Dominion Resources.

"Chinese power companies may be interested to look at opportunities in North America. However, so far there have been few," said Daniel Qiu, a managing director in Credit Suisse's Asia Pacific investment banking group.​

As a springboard to new markets, CTG paid $3.5 billion in 2011 for 21 percent of Energias de Portugal, one of the biggest global investors in wind energy.

Their tie-up might help ease CTG's entry into the United States since EdP's Houston-based U.S. arm owns wind farms in New York, Iowa, Texas and other states.

"This is an interesting way for Three Gorges to essentially get access to U.S. renewable projects through the back door," said Shepherd.​

The two companies are building two hydropower projects in Brazil in addition to the dams CTG is buying from Duke Energy.

CTG has ample resources, with 563.7 billion yuan ($82.8 billion) in assets including 18.7 billion yuan ($2.7 billion) in cash — more than double the price of Duke Energy's Brazilian dams. The company earned 28.8 billion yuan ($4.2 billion) in profit in 2015 on revenue of 63.5 billion yuan ($9.3 billion).

Industrywide, China's state-owned utilities have spent more than $30 billion to buy all or parts of power suppliers in Brazil, Germany, New Zealand and other countries over the past five years, according to Dealogic.

The bulk of that came from State Grid, which has spent $22 billion in Brazil, Australia, Italy, Greece and Portugal. In 2013, it made China's biggest utility acquisition in a developed country, paying $6.7 billion for 60 percent of Australia's SGSP (Australia) Assets Pty. Ltd., an operator of gas and electric distribution networks.

"They are much more aggressive and are more willing to take on risk," said Shepherd.​


http://abcnews.go.com/International...ble-power-giant-builds-global-empire-44540770
 
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China makes further reforms to lower energy costs
(Xinhua) 21:01, January 04, 2017

China's top economic planner Wednesday unveiled new measures to regulate electricity pricing at provincial power grids.

The measures clarified pricing, incentives and restraints for power grids, a National Development and Reform Commission statement said.

The new measures came after a previous move by the commission to supervise energy prices in terms of power grid costs.

Due to energy price decreases brought by the measures, enterprises nationwide have saved more than 180 billion yuan (about 26 billion U.S. dollars) in energy costs since 2015, the statement said.

Lowering corporate costs is one of the five main tasks of China's ongoing supply-side structural reform, along with cutting industrial capacity, reducing the housing inventory, cutting leverage and improving weak economic links.

Despite difficulties, policymakers have decided to stick with supply-side structural reform in 2017 in a bid to address entrenched problems and find long-term growth momentum.
 
Will Solar and Wind Surpass Hydro by early 2020s ?

Several energy analysts who are pro-solar and wind believe that they will dominate global energy and not face limitations based upon grid issues and other factors The pro-solar case is based upon massive scaling of lower cost solar and low cost batteries.

In the USA, the residential solar market is starting to slow down after years of high double-digit gains—on average, the market has grown more than 50% every year in the past four years. But as the market becomes more saturated, it’s not the same high growth of a new industry, said Nicole Litvak, an analyst with GTM Research. She expects growth of around 10% to 15% in the coming years.


India plans to add 12 GW solar power, 4 GW wind energy, 500 MW biomass-based power and 225 MW small hydro power capacity between April 2016 and March 2017. Between April and September 2016, India managed to add only 3.2 GW of grid-connected renewable energy capacity compared to the full year target of 16.6 GW. India plans to have an installed solar power capacity of 100 GW and wind energy capacity of 60 GW by March 2022.

In order for solar and wind to surpass hydro then India would have to surpass hydro the target for solar by about ten times and for China to match that as well. 100GW of solar is about 100 TWh. Solar and wind need to get an additional 2000 TWh beyond the growth projected by the IEA.

Elon says there needs to be 200,000GWh of batteries to make the world go solar. This would need about 300-900 gigafactory battery factories to produce the required batteries in about 40 years.

China is cutting subsidies to wind by 15% and solar by 19% in 2017 The move comes as average solar panel prices have tumbled about 30 percent this year, according to data from Bloomberg New Energy Finance, resulting in a lowering of the bids that solar developers offer to build projects. China will also encourage local authorities to continue making use of auctions to select renewable energy developers, in order to further lower power prices



About 1000 Terawatt hours of Hydro power was added over the last ten years. This is more than the total wind and solar power generation. Hydro will still add 500 Terawatt hours over the next 5 years.

Wind and solar power combined is still less than one third the hydro power generation. The projection is that worldwide wind and solar power combined will be about half of hydro power generation in 2021.















http://www.nextbigfuture.com/2016/12/will-solar-and-wind-surpass-hydro-by.html
 
Construction milestones at new Chinese units
05 January 2017

Installation of the fourth and final reactor coolant pump at the Sanmen 2 AP1000 was completed yesterday, China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) announced. Meanwhile, the boron injection tank has been installed at the second demonstration Hualong One unit being constructed at the Fuqing plant.

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The last main coolant pump is installed at Sanmen 2 (Image: CNNC)

Each AP1000 employs four main reactor coolant pumps - each almost seven metres tall and 1.5 metres wide and weighing some 91 tonnes - which circulate reactor coolant through the core, loop piping and steam generators.

Westinghouse is currently constructing four AP1000 units in China, two each at Sanmen in Zhejiang province and Haiyang in Shandong. US manufacturer Curtiss-Wright was awarded a contract by Westinghouse to produce 16 reactor coolant pumps for the units in 2007.

Sanmen unit 1, construction of which began in April 2009, is expected to be the first AP1000 to begin operating. First concrete for Sanmen 2 was poured in December 2009. All four Chinese AP1000s are scheduled to be in operation by the end of this year.

Four AP1000 reactors are currently being built in the USA - two each at Vogtle and Summer - while three AP1000s are also proposed for the Moorside site in the UK.

Progress at Fuqing 6

The boron injection tank was also installed yesterday at Fuqing 6 - the second Hualong One unit under construction at the site in China's Fujian province.

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The boron injection tank is moved into place at Fuqing 6 (Image: CNNC)

The boron injection tank - weighing almost 20 tonnes - will contain a boric acid solution that can be injected into the reactor in the event of a severe accident to shut down the chain reaction in case the control rods are not capable of being inserted into the core.

China's State Council gave final approval for construction of Fuqing units 5 and 6 in April 2016. The pouring of first concrete for the reactor basemats for Fuqing 5 and 6 - marking the official start of construction of the units - took place in May and December 2015, respectively. Fuqing 5 and 6 are scheduled to be completed in 2019 and 2020.

Construction of two Hualong One units is also under way at China General Nuclear's Fangchenggang plant in Guangxi province.



http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/NN-Construction-milestones-at-new-Chinese-units-0501175.html
 
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