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Wind Leaves Nuclear Behind In China

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Originally published on sustainablog.


China’s Ningxia Yinyi Wind Farm

By J. Matthew Roney

In China, wind power is leaving nuclear behind. Electricity output from China’s wind farms exceeded that from its nuclear plants for the first time in 2012, by a narrow margin. Then in 2013, wind pulled away—outdoing nuclear by 22 percent. The 135 terawatt-hours of Chinese wind-generated electricity in 2013 would be nearly enough to power New York State.

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Once China’s Renewable Energy Law established the development framework for renewables in 2005, the stage was set for wind’s exponential growth. Wind generating capacity more than doubled each year from 2006 to 2009 and has since increased by nearly 40 percent annually, to reach 91 gigawatts by the end of 2013 (1 gigawatt = 1,000 megawatts). Over 80 percent of this world-leading wind capacity is now feeding electricity to the grid.

Wind generation in 2013 could have been even higher, by an estimated 10 percent, but for the problem known as curtailment—when wind turbines are stopped because the grid cannot handle any more electricity. To help reduce curtailment and reach the official 2020 goal of 200 grid-connected gigawatts, China is building the world’s largest ultra-high-voltage transmission system. The raft of projects now under construction will connect the windier north and west to population centers in the central and eastern provinces.

Why is Wind Power Generation Surpassing Nuclear?

One of the reasons why nuclear power has not kept up with wind in China is the relative time it takes to get a project up and running. Whereas the typical Chinese nuclear reactor takes roughly six years to build, a wind farm can be completed in a matter of months.

Another factor was the interruption of China’s nuclear expansion after the 2011 disaster in Fukushima, Japan. The government suspended new reactor approvals until late 2012 and reviewed the safety of both operational and under-construction reactors over several months. Officials also deferred until at least 2015 plans for reactors in non-coastal provinces, where water needed for cooling is highly polluted and in increasingly short supply.

If all 28 gigawatts of nuclear capacity now under construction are completed by 2020, China will have reached 45 gigawatts—22 percent shy of the official capacity target of 58 gigawatts. Some of the more-advanced reactors now being built are seeing cost overruns and schedule delays of a year or more, so the nuclear fleet in 2020 may be even further from the official goal.

Despite its impressive recent growth, wind power still provides less than 3 percent of China’s electricity, well behind hydropower (which typically makes up about 17 percent) and coal, the leading electricity source (at more than 75 percent). But as wind power opens up an even greater lead over nuclear, it is showing the potential to emerge as the safe, scalable, water-sparing backbone of a low-carbon Chinese energy economy.

Wind Leaves Nuclear Behind In China | CleanTechnica
 
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Fantastic news. :cheers:

I remember only a few years ago, when most people considered wind-power to be very inefficient in comparison to other renewable energy sources.

But times change, and technologies change. I read a report that China has enough potential wind-power to be self-sufficient by 2030. Of course, that is highly unlikely to ever happen, but the point is that the potential is there.

Environmental Scientists Estimate That China Could Meet Its Entire Future Energy Needs By Wind Alone -- ScienceDaily

A team of environmental scientists from Harvard and Tsinghua University demonstrated the enormous potential for wind-generated electricity in China. Using extensive metrological data and incorporating the Chinese government's energy bidding and financial restrictions for delivering wind power, the researchers estimate that wind alone has the potential to meet the country's electricity demands projected for 2030.

The analysis indicated that a network of wind turbines operating at as little as 20 percent of their rated capacity could provide potentially as much as 24.7 petawatt-hours of electricity annually, or more than seven times China's current consumption. The researchers also determined that wind energy alone, at around 7.6 U.S. Cents per kilowatt-hour, could accommodate the country's entire demand for electricity projected for 2030.
 
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Fantastic news. :cheers:

I remember only a few years ago, when most people considered wind-power to be very inefficient in comparison to other renewable energy sources.

But times change, and technologies change. I read a report that China has enough potential wind-power to be self-sufficient by 2030. Of course, that is highly unlikely to ever happen, but the point is that the potential is there.

Environmental Scientists Estimate That China Could Meet Its Entire Future Energy Needs By Wind Alone -- ScienceDaily

Funny thing, I was just talking with my friends in the lab on Friday on what a world we live in. When I was a child, wind turbines are basically something you only see in universities and wind power is this fancy, futuristic term. And before you know it, it begin to make up a large chunk of our power supply. It really makes me feel old already. :-)
 
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China issues 27.6GW plan for 2015

26 February 2014 by Jianxiang Yang,

CHINA: The National Energy Administration (NEA) has published the fourth instalment plan of wind power projects for the Twelfth Five-Year Period (2010-2015).

460

Goldwind has around 400MW of the new orders

The new wind installations on the list total 27.60GW, more than the 20GW that had been widely expected. Starting in 2011, the NEA has approved, in four instalments, wind projects totalling more than 100GW in generating capacity.:coffee::crazy:

"The new plan brings a clear message that the state authority will continue to push and give strong support for the development of wind power," said Yi Yuechun, executive deputy director of the National Renewable Energy Information Management Centre.

There are indications that the Chinese wind industry's fortunes are improving. The latest statistics released by NEA show that China added 14.49GW of new grid-connected wind installations last year. The cumulative capacity reached 77.16GW, up 23% on the previous year. The total is expected to exceed 90GW by the end of this year, NEA sources said.

More than half of the projects — 60% of those in the plan — have been approved in the southern and central regions, where electricity demand is relatively strong.



Hunan Province in central China alone has been granted around 2GW of new wind installations. And thanks to the new Hami-Zhengzhou ultra-high voltage power transmission line, the largest installations of 3.045GW were awarded to the Xingjiang region in western China.

An analyst said Goldwind, which is based in Xingjiang, would benefit greatly from the new plan.

In the past few years, the wind turbine manufacturer has diversified operations to invest in wind farms. The new plan included 400MW to be developed by Goldwind.

Goldwind's low-wind wind turbines should prove competitive in the country's southern regions.

China issues 27GW plan for 2015 | Windpower Monthly
 
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Nation plans major drive to expand wind capacity

2014-02-26 14:19 China Daily Web Editor: qindexing

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The world's largest offshore wind station under construction in Rudong, Jiangsu province. China aims to expand its installed capacity for wind power this year, with an emphasis on offshore facilities. Xu Congjun / for China Daily

Offshore facilities will be given highest priority by policymakers

China plans a big push to increase the installed capacity of wind power this year, with offshore facilities getting top priority, a senior energy official said.

"We will continue to work actively on the offshore wind sector this year by accelerating the establishment of a benchmark feed-in tariff for offshore projects," said Shi Lishan, deputy director of the new energy department of the National Energy Administration.

Feed-in tariffs are guaranteed payments that act as production-based incentives to power suppliers.

"For offshore wind developers, it is very important to have a pricing mechanism so that they can have a clear picture of how they can generate profits."

As pollution lingers over many major cities, the government is speeding up the pace of offshore wind power development after years of stagnation, Shi said.

China aims to expand its offshore wind power installed capacity to 5 million kilowatts by 2015 and 30 million kW by 2020, but those targets seem ambitious.

In 2012, the world's largest wind power market had installed only 389,600 kW of offshore wind capacity. Even though this put China third after the United Kingdom and Denmark, it was still far short of the targets for 2015 and 2030.

But China, the world's biggest energy user, made progress in connecting idle wind farms to the grid last year.

Thanks to improved grid construction and dispatching and enhanced equipment performance, wind turbines' average time in service increased 9.7 percent to 207.4 hours from the previous year, the NEA said.

The industry added installed wind capacity of 14.49 million kW last year, 23 percent more than in the previous year, bringing the total (on- and offshore) to 77.16 million kW, according to the NEA.

China relies on coal for about 70 percent of its energy. The government has been moving to restructure the nation's energy consumption as it strives to increase renewable energy sources to 15 percent of total consumption by 2020 to cut air pollution.

According to the Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Index, China was just behind the United States, which was at the top of the ranking for the fourth quarter.

After China came Germany, Japan and the United Kingdom.

The index, released by EY (a member firm of Ernst & Young Global Ltd), scored 40 countries on the attractiveness of their renewable energy markets, energy infrastructure and the suitability for individual technologies.

China scored 73.1 out of 100 in the fourth quarter, up from 71.6 in the third. The US slipped to 74.4 from 74.7, EY said in an e-mailed report to Bloomberg.

"China has remained a dominant market in the index, reflecting an unprecedented pace of deployment backed by substantial targets and continued high growth in energy demand," said Klair White, editor of the report.

Nation plans major drive to expand wind capacity - Headlines, features, photo and videos from ecns.cn|china|news|chinanews|ecns|cns
 
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20131028043923150.jpg

Oil, Gas, Coal, Nuke, Hydro, Renewable energy
Credit:51report.com
China's energy consumption by source 2003~2012 (in mil tons of equivalent oil)

Still a long long way to go! :frown::eek:
 
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