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Which country has more solar capacity than rest of world combined?

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By Lindsay Wilson on 27 February 2014

In 2013 China installed a record 12GW of solar power capacity, considerably more than Germany ever has in one year. I read stories about it all over the place. It was big news for renewable energy watchers.

What I didn’t read in any of those stories was that in the same year China installed about 40 GW of solar water heating capacity. You see solar hot water may be quite boring, but it still owns solar power in terms of installed capacity.

The Other Solar Energy: Solar Hot Water

For a little perspective let’s compare the global installed capacity of solar water heating (WH) and solar photovoltaics (PV).



In the graph above the blue line shows the growth of global solar water heating in GWth. The figures are only for glazed hot water systems from the Renewables 2013 Global Status Report. By 2012 around 70% the 255 GWth of global capacity was installed China. A testament to how cheaply China produces and installs solar hot water.

The red line shows the growth of solar PV. The sharp growth in installed capacity since 2007 reflects falling costs and growing enthusiasm for solar PV around the world. By 2012 total installed capacity was up to 100 GWe. You can see more about the data in our Top 10 Solar Countries post.

Although the scale is the same I’ve put the data for each on separate axes because thermal and electric capacity are not directly comparable. But lets not let that spoil our fun for a minute or two.

Solar Hot Water is Big in China

Instead why don’t we compare Chinese solar hot water capacity to all the solar PV installed globally by the end of 2012.



That’s quite a chart isn’t it?

By the end of 2012 all the solar PV capacity in the world totaled about 100 GWe. Meanwhile in China solar water heating capacity had reached roughly 178 GWth. The Chinese are seriously loving their vacuum tubes!!

It gets better. If you look at the combined capacity for solar water and photovoltaics China actually has about 20 GW more installed solar than the rest of the world combined. So much for Germany leading the world in solar?!

Mixing thermal and electric?

Now . . . if you are a bit of an energy wonk you’ll have been twitching from the start that not only am I mixing thermal and electric capacity but that I’m also comparing capacity rather than energy generated. Of course you’ve got a very good point, but I didn’t want to let that spoil the fun.

Lets deal with capacity first, for the whole world. 100 GWe of the solar PV is good for about 110 TWhe of electricity over a year. In contrast 255 GWth of capacity produces about 220 TWhth of hot water. So the amount of solar hot water energy produced globally is about double the amount of electric energy produced.

Now in terms of economic value it is clear that a kWh of heating is worth less than a kWh of electricity. How different that value is depends very much on the fuel displaced, the heating system efficiency and relative prices of local fuel and electricity.

All that aside, you’ve got to give it to the Chinese. That is a whole lot of cheap hot water!! It reminds me a little of their 200 million electric bikes no one knows about.

Which country has more solar capacity than rest of world combined? : Renew Economy
 
1,100 MW Solar PV Project Now Under Construction In China

Originally published on RenewEconomy.

By Sophie Vorrath.


The development of a huge 1.1GW solar power plant project in China’s Gansu Province has begun, with China-based solar manufacturer and developer, China Singyes Solar Technologies Holdings, announcing the commencement of the 300MW ‘first phase’ in Hongshagang Industrial Park in Minqin County, Wuwei.


Image Credit: China Solar Cells via Wikimedia Commons

Development of the 1.1GW PV plant was announced by Singyes in December last year, as part of a broader deal with the Minqin County government to establish an environmental industry and clean energy development zone, including a solar R&D base.

This 300MW first phase of the solar power plant is expected to be completed by the end of 2014, and have an average annual power generating output of 480 million kWh. The overall project has a planned construction period of five years.

Singyes, which is listed on Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index, has been enjoying a good run, lately – last week bucking a broader market slump to hit a record high at $HK12.58 during the Friday session.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Goldman Sachs added the stock to its “conviction buy” list last week, describing the solar-power products maker as “well-positioned” to benefit from growing demand for its products in mainland China.

Much of Sinyes’ positive growth in sales and revenue has come from its building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV) unit, which makes building materials with solar power functions. In 2013, BIPV accounted for nearly half of the company’s revenue, compared with 40 per cent in 2012.

Singyes CFO, Jimmy Yu, said in August last year that he hoped BIPV would account for an even greater share of future sales because the gross profit margin of the product remained high at 32 per cent. The company also recorded growth in its renewable energy, new materials and curtain walls businesses.

In a media release last week about the Minqin County project, the company said the solar R&D base would focus mainly on local agricultural produce needs and on power supply to local areas with no ready access to electricity. It wouls also include the production of solar heating baking room and the R&D of smart micro grid systems.
“We hope that, by participating in solar project in Minqin County, Wuwei, Gansu Province, we can optimise the local energy structure, protect the ecological environment, as well as promoting the use of solar energy, and advancing the development of the PV industry,” said Liu Hongwei, chairman of Singyes Solar.

“We will make use of the Wuwei solar product R&D base and take advantage of local conditions to explore a new PV industry that incorporates PV power generation, desert management, and modern agriculture as well as the new approach of industrialised desertification control.”


Read more at 1,100 MW Solar PV Project Now Under Construction In China | CleanTechnica
 
What a childish title chosen by the poster !

Why dont you say China has more.. whatever .
 
China did a great job in bringing down the cost of photovoltaic cells, and hence per unit production cost.
 
India to build world's largest solar plant

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India has pledged to build the world’s most powerful solar plant. With a nominal capacity of 4,000 megawatts, comparable to that of four full-size nuclear reactors, the ‘ultra mega' project will be more than ten times larger than any other solar project built so far, and it will spread over 77 square kilometres of land — greater than the island of Manhattan.

Six state-owned companies have formed a joint venture to execute the project, which they say can be completed in seven years at a projected cost of US$4.4 billion. The proposed location is near Sambhar Salt Lake in the northern state of Rajasthan.

The solar photovoltaic power plant will have an estimated life of 25 years and is expected to supply 6.4 billion kilowatt-hours per year, according to official figures. It could help to reduce India's carbon dioxide emissions by more than 4 million tonnes per year, estimates Parimita Mohanty, a fellow at the Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) in New Delhi.

India currently has a grid-connected solar-power capacity of 2,208 MW — up from a mere 17.8 MW in 2010, when the central government launched the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission (JNNSM). The JNNSM aims for India to reach an installed capacity of 20,000 MW (or 20 gigawatts) of solar power by 2022 (see 'India embarks on solar drive').


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If things go according to plan, we might well surpass that figure,” says Tarun Kapoor, chief of the JNNSM and joint secretary in India’s Ministry of New and Renewable Energy.

Green ambition
The production cost of solar power in India has fallen by more than half in recent years, from 17 rupees ($0.27) per kilowatt-hour (kWh) three years ago to 7.50 rupees per kWh currently, according to Kapoor, and it could plummet further. But these costs are still high compared to coal (2.50 rupees per kWh), nuclear (3 rupees per kWh) or natural gas (5.5 rupees per kWh), says Mohanty.

India is mapping its potential for solar-energy production across the entire country on the basis of satellite imagery, in collaboration with the United States. It has also set up 51 dedicated measurement stations to assess the availability of solar radiation, adding to data collected by 45 meteorological observatories.


But the ostensibly green mega-project has been criticized by environmentalists. “We don’t think this should be the way to go ahead,” says Chandra Bhushan, deputy director-general of the think tank Center for Science and Environment in New Delhi. “Feeding 4,000 MW into an already leaking grid where 20% of electricity gets wasted in transmission and distribution losses and [most] ends up feeding the urban centres makes little sense,” he says, adding that less than 50% of Indians living in villages have access to electricity.

Bhushan says that a decentralized solar approach, with multiple smaller projects spread over rural areas, would have a far greater reach, a larger social benefit and bigger human-development impact than a gargantuan plant feeding the grid. India's population is comparable to China's but its electricity consumption is only about one-quarter of China's, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

Rajendra Pachauri, director-general of TERI and chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, says that the JNNSM should keep pushing on both the large-scale and decentralized approaches. “India must see itself emerge as the worldwide leader in harnessing solar energy involving technologies for centralized power generation, as well as millions of small, decentralized applications.”
India to build world's largest solar plant : Nature News & Comment
 
If you click the link provided,you will find that you,of all people,are being extremely childish。:rofl:

It is a great pity that,even with the help of the 3rd eye,you are still blind。

Haha for a sec at the title I thought it could be the usa or eu but yes it is China, again!

India to build world's largest solar plant

india is developing but still a long way to go :coffee:
 
I guess Smog could lower the performance of those solar energy plant
 
We are the biggest market for solar power and biggest producer.

No one is touching us :coffee:
 
The Western Provinces of China can provide vast areas of un/underutilized land for constructing many more Solar farms. Good Luck fellas.
 
germany makes only green propaganda, if you count water power russia makes more renewable energy than them
 
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