China Drafts 10-Year Plan To Raise ‘Clean Energy’ To 15 Pct Of Total Use

Lundi, mars 8th, 2010

China plans to have « clean energy » account for 15 percent of its total consumption under a 10-year renewable energy promotion program soon to be made public, a state-run newspaper cites the head of the country’s National Energy Administration as saying, reported AP.

The government will spend billions of dollars on building nuclear and solar power plants, wind farms and on research into renewable energy technology, Zhang Guobao said in Tuesday’s edition of the China Daily.

The plan would accelerate efforts already under way to help ease reliance on expensive oil imports and heavily polluting coal, which fuels about three-quarters of China’s electricity generation.

It also is in line with Beijing’s pledges to rein in output of greenhouse gases by reducing China’s carbon intensity — its use of fossil fuels per unit of economic output — by 40 to 45 percent by 2020.

Renewable energy accounted for 9.9 percent of China’s total energy consumption last year, up from 8.5 percent the year before, the report said. Under the plan, by 2020, the government intends to raise that to 15 percent.

Source : Konaxis



China Mulls Compulsory Green Energy Purchases By Grid Operators

Mardi, décembre 29th, 2009

China’s top legislature Tuesday discussed a legal amendment to require electricity grid companies to buy all the power produced by renewable energy generators, reported Xinhua.

The State Council energy department and the state power regulatory agency should supervise the purchases, said the draft amendment to the Renewable Energy Law, which was submitted to the government for its second reading.

A national plan on renewable energy development issued in 2007 set a target to increase renewable resources to supply 15 percent of its total energy consumption by 2020.

Power enterprises refusing to buy power produced by renewable energy generators will be fined up to an amount double that of the economic loss of the renewable energy company, the draft said.

However, some lawmakers said the development of renewable energy in China faced many problems such as difficulties in connecting with the grid, over-production of wind power and solar cell material, and a lack of innovative key technologies.

They suggested that revision of the law should focus on prevention of blind development of renewable energy.

Of various types of renewable energy in China, lawmakers said, hydropower’s quality and technology was the best. They suggested to further standardize hydropower development.

Other lawmakers said the country should support the development of biomass energy using crop straw so as to improve ecological environment and farmers’ income.

Source : Konaxis



China and kenya setting up a joint venture for solar energy products

Vendredi, juin 19th, 2009

Solar energy is now going to be harnessed in Africa thanks to a new alliance between Kenya and China to develop a whole range of solar products that will be utilized for the purpose. The joint research project is mainly going to focus on ways of adapting solar panels made for China to the requirements of the Kenyan conditions. The partners from the two sides include an electronic technology company from Kenya and the Natural Energy Resource Research Institute, Gansu in China.

The joint research program has already been approved by the Chinese government and a sum of $386,000 has been allocated for the purpose. Likely to continue till 2012, the project would require the setting up of an office of the Institute in Kenya and some key researchers posted there.

Kenya being a hot country stands to benefit by tapping the vast amount of solar energy available. Till now it has been using electricity generated by using hydropower and oil that is primarily imported. It has a large rural population that is still dependent on wood and coal for cooking and heating purposes. The use of solar energy to meet its energy requirements would transform the power sector completely and the savings made this way could be put in use for other developmental projects that need to be implemented urgently.

The Natural Energy Research Institute is located in Western China and since the time it was set up in 1978, it has trained 500 people in the field of solar technology for Africa. The personnel also include 12 people for Kenya. China is a world leader in the manufacture of solar heaters, and by passing on the technical expertise to Kenya, would be helping the poor nation in a big way.

Once completed the solar energy project would light up schools and homes, health facilities and tourism destinations and help all those who still need to burn lamps in the dark of the night. The renewable solar energy is likely to have a large initial expense but once systems are put in place the solar energy would be harnessed free of cost.

Source : China Africa



Bidding for China’s 10 Megawatt solar power plant in march

Lundi, mars 2nd, 2009

China is moving quickly in meeting its alternative energy goals. An open-bid competition has been set in March to choose a project lead for the construction of a 10 MWp (megawatt-peak) solar power plant in northwestern China.

The plant is estimated to generate 16.37 million kilowatt-hours of electricity a year. This follows a previous investment in a 400 megawatt-peak wind farm, which costs $659 million to construct.

The plant is designed to cover a surface area of roughly 247 acres (0.38 square miles) in the desert of northwestern China, according to reports. The cost of the on-grid solar power-generating station is expected to be about $73 million.

The China government in 2008 approved the construction of a solar power-generating station located on an offshore island in Shanghai and another located in Inner Mongolia, with a feed-in tariff rate of four yuan per kilowatt-hour for each, the source indicated. For this project, the China government will offer a feed-in tariff rate of below two yuan per kilowatt-hour, possibly as low as 1.7-1.8 yuan per kilowatt-hour under intensive competition, the source pointed out.”

In a related development, Kyocera, announced its plan to build a new plant for solar modules in Tianjin, China. The plant will more than double its annual output of solar cells to 650 megawatts in fiscal 2011 from fiscal 2008.

The new plant, which will have a floor space of 28,800 square meters, will be constructed beginning April and be completed by next spring, Kyocera said. The company will eventually transfer all Kyocera (Tianjin) Solar manufacturing operations to the new factory.

Source : Konaxis



China to experiment solar thermal power in 30,000 Beijing homes

Vendredi, février 27th, 2009

Asia’s first 1.5-megawatt solar thermal power station, designed by China Academy of Sciences will begin constructing in suburban Beijing next month. The station is expected to cost 100 million yuan and is likely to power at least 30,000 homes when it starts operating in 2010, Wang Zhifeng, chief designer of the plant told China Daily.

The solar power station would get funding from the Ministry of Science, the Beijing municipal government and the academy.

Wang, the laboratory director for solar thermal power at the academy, said the experimental power plant would be designed and operated by 10 Chinese institutions and companies, including the academy, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Huadian Corp and Himin Solar Group.

The plant is expected to generate up to 2.7 million kWh of electricity per year, equivalent to eliminating 2,300 tons of CO2 emissions from conventional power plants, Wang said.

The solar power station  will  cover an area of 13 hectares, and  its solar tower is designed to be 100-m tall,  surrounded by 100 heliostats composed of curved mirrors which track the sun and redirect its rays to a receiver at the top of the tower.

The receiver would convert concentrated solar thermal power from the heliostats into thermal power. Steam from the receiver outlet would be sent directly into the turbine for electricity generation.

Solar thermal power plants are typically much larger than plants made of photovoltaic solar panels that use sunlight to produce electricity.

Wang said large-scale use of solar thermal power would help reduce power cost. The on-grid power price from plants using solar photovoltaic panels is 44 euro cents per kWh while that of solar thermal power is 27 euro cents in countries like Spain.

« Solar thermal power plants cannot be installed as conveniently as solar PV cells, which can also be installed on residents’ roofs, » said Wang. « The solar thermal power generation system is also more complex than solar PV power plants, as it requires sophisticated technology. »

The National Development and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planning agency, has said.

The construction of the solar thermal power plant is  a  large-scale  experiment  to support  China’s   plans to generate at least 150 mW  from solar thermal power stations by 2015.

« If the experimental solar thermal power plant is successful, China may soon start commercial operation of solar thermal power stations of at least 10 mW, » said Shi Dinghuan, president of China Renewable Energy Association (CREA).

Source : Konaxis