Pangu
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Lol, must ask @WebMaster for devine help.
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on top right side option is thereDoes anyone know how to edit the title?
I might have invented a new wordLol, must ask @WebMaster for devine help.
Yep, thank you buddy!!!on top right side option is there
simply great .....dare to dream and will to achieveBEIJING/HONG KONG: China has set a higher-than-expected target for solar power installations in 2015 as it seeks to boost renewable energy use, sparking a sharp rise in the shares of domestic solar companies.
China aims to install 17.8 gigawatts (GW) of solar power capacity this year, China’s National Energy Administration (NEA) said in a document posted on its website.
This is up nearly 20 percent from the original goal of 15 GW of installations and nearly 70 percent from the 10.52 GW of solar generation capacity China installed last year.
Beijing set the target for 2015 in order to “stabilise and expand the solar application market,” the regulator said.
Shares of Chinese solar companies rose early on Wednesday on domestic media reports that China planned to revise up its overall installation target for 2015.
Last month, the NEA had said China aimed to install 15 GW of solar generating capacity this year, but that it would consult the industry before setting a final target.
Wind farm along G215 National Highway, Gansu Province, China
My Adventures Across China | Page 14
Good for environment and also stimulate economy, why not?simply great .....dare to dream and will to achieve
Good for environment and also stimulate economy, why not?
solar water heater everywhere in China!!!Clean energy is the way to go!
Good for him.China Spawns Its Latest Renewable Energy Billionaire
Cao Renxian, chairman of China’s Sungrow Power Supply, has joined the ranks of the world’s renewable energy billionaires following record closing highs in the share price of his Shenzhen-listed company this week.
Sungrow makes power supply equipment for the solar and wind power industries, mainly inverters and converters. Its revenue rose by 44% last year to 3 billion yuan, or $479 million. That helped to boost net profit to 291.7 million yuan, or $46.6 million, an increase of 61% from 2013.
Cao, 46, taught at Hefei University of Technology in eastern China’s Anhui Province in 1993-98 and founded Sungrow in 1997. He owns 39% of the company, a stake worth 6.3 billion yuan, or $1 billion, at today’s record closing price of 25.99 yuan.
Sungrow’s shares have gained more than 40% in the past year. The small-cap ChiNext index at the Shenzhen Stock Exchange has soared 47% in past year, fueling in part by expectations of declining interest rates in China that would make equities investments more attractive than bank deposits.
China’s richest man, Hanergy chairman Li Hejun, also hails from solar power industry. His flagship business, Hong Kong-listed Hanergy Thin-Film Power Group, boasts a market cap six times that of top U.S. thin-film panel supplier First Solar. China’s government is seeking to advance the solar industry to help remedy to the country’s appalling air pollution, an effort that has also benefitted Sungrow.
Sungrow said last November it would form two joint ventures with Samsung SDI that would focus on lithium battery business.
Sungrow employs more than 1,000 people, and has a U.S. headquarters in San Francisco, according to its website.
Cao ranked No. 369 on the 2014 Forbes China Rich List published last October with wealth of $730 million.