China may be ready to kick coal habit

Climate News Network

Yangzhou_-_industrial_area_west_of_Wenfeng_Temple_-_P1130239
A coal-fired power station at Yangzhou in China’s central Jiangsu province Image: Vmenkov via Wikimedia Commons

There are still doubts. The statistics might be proved wrong. But it looks as if China might be starting to wean itself off its coal consumption habit.

China produces and consumes nearly as much coal as the rest of the world combined. Coal, the most polluting of all energy sources, has powered the growth of China’s flyaway economy. But as incomes have risen, so has pollution. The country is now the world’s No.1 emitter of greenhouse gases.

Latest figures indicate that change is on the way, spurred on by a much-vaunted government“war on pollution” campaign. The state-run National Development and Reform Commission reports that domestic coal output shrank over the first five months of 2014 – the first such decline since the start of China’s rapid economic expansion back in the late 1980s.

Virtual halt

Greenpeace, the environmental NGO, said in a recent analysis of China’s coal sector that growth in coal imports, which had been going up at an annual rate of between 13% and 20% in recent years, has come to a virtual halt.

Meanwhile, the official Xinhua news agency says Beijing – a city of nearly 12 million people – will ban the sale and use of coal in its six main districts by 2020.

Coal-fired factories and power plants around the Chinese capital are being shut down and replaced by natural gas facilities. Coal generated 25% of Beijing’s energy in 2012, and the aim is to bring that figure down to less than 10% by 2017. Other cities and regions are following Beijing’s lead.

Just how meaningful these cutbacks in coal use are is difficult to gauge. Air pollution – much of it caused by the burning of low-grade thermal coal − is not only a big environmental issue in China but also a political one as well.

China’s leaders have promised a population increasingly angry about the low quality of the air they breathe and the water they drink that the government is determined to tackle pollution.

Yet coal-fired power plants are still being built at a considerable pace, and many more are planned.

Some analysts argue that the present slowdown in China’s coal consumption is only temporary, the result of a dip in industrial output that will be reversed as soon as the economy roars ahead again.

Less reliant

Others say the decline in coal consumption is part of a long-term trend. As China’s economy matures, becoming less dependent on heavy industrial goods and embarking on more hi-tech and service-oriented projects, the country will become ever more energy efficient – and less reliant on coal.

China might be the world’s biggest emitter of fossil fuel emissions, but it also has fast become a global leader in hydro, wind and solar power.

No one is suggesting that coal is going to be absent from China’s energy mix anytime soon. The lung-jarring pollution of many of China’s cities is likely still to be evident for some years yet. But coal is no longer king.

That’s bad news for big coal exporters to China, particularly Australia and Indonesia. But it’s potentially good news for millions in China who crave clean air. And it’s very good news for the planet.

Source: Climate News Network. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

14 responses to “China may be ready to kick coal habit”

  1. michael Avatar
    michael

    with a combination of coal power stations being built at a considerable pace, and the parallel efforts to decrease pollution, there is a decent argument for increased demand for high quality coal like the export product from Australia
    there is a big struggle for the positive renewable message about china, when they are also such high emitters. that struggle to reconcile the two is apparent in the swinging narrative of even this short piece. It’s an interesting dichotomy.

    1. Bob_Wallace Avatar
      Bob_Wallace

      Coal plants are being built, but coal plants are also being closed. Like Germany, China is replacing some very inefficient coal burners with much more efficient units. This will mean as much or more electricity produced with a significantly lower amount of coal burned.

      Then, do pay attention to the amount of wind and solar now being installed in China.

      1. michael Avatar
        michael

        so more electricity, higher efficiency, essentially same volume of coal required, probably not a shining light for GHG. when it’s convenient, the gross amounts quickly turn to a ‘per capita’ metric

        1. Bob_Wallace Avatar
          Bob_Wallace

          I write “This will mean as much or more electricity produced with a significantly lower amount of coal burned.”

          And then you write “more electricity, higher efficiency, essentially same volume of coal required”

          Why do I get the feeling you failed to read?

          1. michael Avatar
            michael

            read it, using vague terms like “significantly lower amounts” arising from some efficiency gains even while demand goes up is where we deviate. all good. I just feel it is going to be a slower transition than you do, both defendable positions. from todays paper
            “Global thermal coal production is 7000 million tonnes annually. China digs and consumes half of this.
            It runs 13,900 coal mines. Australia exports just under 200 million tonnes a year. That represents just 3 per cent of annual production. We have 73 thermal coal mines.”
            China isn’t a climate change choir boy, but the greenies/enviro lobbies gnash their teeth about australia and our coal production

          2. Bob_Wallace Avatar
            Bob_Wallace

            In 2013 China decreased both their coal production and coal imports.

            China’s government has stated that they intend to cap coal use by 2015 and set the cap at 2011 levels which would be less than burned in any years post 2011. Recently they announced that they may not be able to reduce to 2011 levels until 2017.

            China has a very aggressive renewable energy program. They moved very quickly into first place in wind. In a single year, 2013, China installed more solar than the US has in all years combined.

            China has begun a very aggressive program to move drivers into EVs.

            Everyone should be gnashing their teeth over what Australia is doing.

          3. michael Avatar
            michael

            http://www.climatecentral.org/blogs/chinas-growing-coal-use-is-worlds-growing-problem-16999

            haha, you’d already commented on it. those silly princeton people don’t know what they are talking about!

          4. Bob_Wallace Avatar
            Bob_Wallace

            “The state-run National Development and Reform Commission reports that domestic coal output shrank over the first five months of 2014 – the first such decline since the start of China’s rapid economic expansion back in the late 1980s.

            Greenpeace, the environmental NGO, said in a recent analysis of China’s coal sector that growth in coal imports, which had been going up at an annual rate of between 13% and 20% in recent years, has come to a virtual halt.

            Meanwhile, the official Xinhua news agency says Beijing – a city of nearly 12 million people – will ban the sale and use of coal in its six main districts by 2020.

            Coal-fired factories and power plants around the Chinese capital are being shut down and replaced by natural gas facilities.”

            Now, we got that. Statements of intent from the Chinese government along with a decrease in coal imports and production.

            And we’ve got Eric’s big black graph showing China increasing coal consumption in the future. Based, apparently, on the fact that China burned coal in the past.

            If you look at Climate Central’s graph you can see a slope break starting around 2010. Then from 2014 on CC assumes a return to post 2010 increases.

            I’ve noticed that some people have a hard time looking at current events and tend to put a ruler on history then draw predictions into the future as if nothing ever changes….

          5. michael Avatar
            michael

            Or, interpet a short term pause in growth as the new normal or indication of sharp u turn….
            As with all predictions, we can’t settle the outcome here and now, but nice to have the discussion about the multiple potential outcomes

          6. Bob_Wallace Avatar
            Bob_Wallace

            We can’t be sure of the future, but when a country’s leaders state intentions over a reasonably long period and then things start moving in that direction I’d think it would be safer to bet on change.

            BTW, no one is predicting a sharp u turn. It will almost certainly be a slowing, stop, and then gradual movement in the opposite direction.

          7. michael Avatar
            michael

            yep, I offset the official rhetoric with stories such as http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/01/07/china-coal-idUKL3N0K90H720140107 and wonder what the true picture is, a pause seems likely to me I guess

          8. Bob_Wallace Avatar
            Bob_Wallace

            I suppose if you assume what the Chinese government states is “official rhetoeric” then you mind is closed.

            I look at the last two sentences of the article you linked and wonder who is going to be right.

            “The government’s 2011-2015 energy plan put coal production capacity at 4.1 billion tonnes by 2015, but Lau said it may be much higher.

            “We estimate China’s total coal production capacity will be 4.7 billion tonnes by 2015 – I think the government figure is a big underestimation.””

          9. michael Avatar
            michael

            not assume that it is rhetoric, open to the possibility that it is.
            i’m joining dots of “The scale of the increase, which only includes major mines, reflects Beijing’s aim to put 860 million tonnes of new (NEW) coal production capacity into operation over the five years to 2015, more than the entire annual output of India.” and conclude they are planning on consuming lots of coal for the next 20-30years minimum. people always conveniently question analysts when it doesn’t fit their view. I’v read anaylst reports from major banks which question validity of all statistics coming out of china official sources, but then when an analyst supports big increases in say solar, everyone of that bent trumpets it. that’s how opinions work.

          10. michael Avatar
            michael

            this pretty much sums up how I personally think it will play out (obviously could very much be wrong)
            “While Beijing said in September that it would cut the share of coal in its primary energy mix to “less than 65 percent” by 2017, down from 66.8 percent in 2012, consumption will still rise in absolute terms, with total energy demand set to grow 4.3 percent a year over the 2011-2015 period.”

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