China has installed a massive field of solar panels on a particularly poignant site: a lake formed by the collapse of abandoned coal mines.
The world's largest floating solar project can produce enough power to light up a nearby city in China's eastern Anhui province. The local government wants to expand the initiative to more than a dozen sites, which together would generate the same amount of electricity as a full-size nuclear reactor, the New York Times reported this week.
SEE ALSO: Prince's secret energy investment could help solar startups under TrumpThe 40-megawatt project, which was connected to the grid in mid-May, provides a powerful example of China's broader ambition to lead the world in clean energy development and the fight against climate change -- goals that, until recently, were shared by the U.S. government.
With President Donald Trump moving to step back from America's leading role in global climate efforts, the Chinese government is moving in to fill that void.
In Beijing this week, Chinese President Xi Jinping highlighted his country's clean energy efforts at a meeting of global energy ministers, just days after Trump announced his decision to withdraw America from the Paris Climate Agreement. U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry, who attended the meeting, told reporters he welcomes China taking "the mantle of leadership on the climate."
That's not to say China has totally bucked fossil fuels. Far from it. The world's most populous country is also the planet's top emitter of greenhouse gases, and it still accounts for about half the total coal consumed worldwide.
But Chinese leaders have said they're committed to steering their economy toward cleaner energy sources, not just for environmental reasons but also to secure investments and jobs in growing industries like solar and wind power and electric vehicles.
Green jobs are expected to reach 24 million in 2030, up from 9.8 million in 2016, as more countries work to combat climate change, the International Renewable Energy Agency said in its annual report on May 24.
In January, the Chinese government canceled plans to build more than 100 coal-fired power plants, in an effort to limit carbon emissions and curb the dangerous smog choking its cities. China’s energy agency has said it would spend 2.5 trillion yuan, or $361 billion, on clean energy projects by 2020 to help shift the nation away from fossil fuels.
China's floating solar project, which boasts 166,000 waterproof panels, is similar to smaller facilities in Japan, Singapore, the U.K. and Israel.
Delegations from Japan, Taiwan, Vietnam, Singapore, and beyond have visited the lake regularly to study the project while Sungrow, the project's developer, prepares to develop the solar technology to sell abroad, the Times reported.
"China is a real driver in the money they invest in the diligence of their innovation,” California Gov. Jerry Brown told Bloomberg Televisionthis week. Brown met with President Xi this week in Beijing, signaling California's growing leadership role on climate as the Trump administration retreats.
"I want California to partner with China in that endeavor. Otherwise we won’t achieve our climate goals," Brown said.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
China just built the world's biggest floating solar project-叶瘦花残网
sitemap
文章
838
浏览
656
获赞
13
Trump just tweeted a pic of his head on Rocky's shirtless body. What the hell is happening?
What, and I simply can't stress this next part enough, the hell did Trump just do?It's the WednesdayHow to listen to audiobooks: Free apps vs. paid subscriptions
There's really nothing like making it through a good book. It can expand your understanding of the wWhatsApp's desktop app is finally getting voice and video calls. There's just one catch.
WhatsApp is adding voice and video calls to its desktop app, allowing users to both make and answerThe U.S. government finally decides to get serious about ransomware
All it took was a fundamental disruption to the nation's fuel supply and a threat to meat, but the UWTF is raclette, and why is it all over Instagram?
Mashable bites into a creamy, nutty, gooey, and sometimes stinky world during our fist-ever Cheese WXiaomi Mi 11 Ultra's rear display looks strangely familiar, and now we know why
Imagine if Apple put an Apple Watch on the back of its iPhone?Well, Xiaomi did do something like thaWhy you should update your iPhone to iOS 14.5.1 now
That sense of déjà vu you're experiencing is totally understandable. It was just lastHow battery swapping could reduce EV charge time to just 10 minutes
The fastest electric vehicle charging stations currently get an empty battery to 80 percent full inFacebook tries to warn users about Apple 'tax,' Apple says no
Apple and Facebook are clashing heads again. Facebook recently tried to inform its users that AppleApple pushes AirTags privacy update in wake of security flaws
It's been a little over a month since Apple released its AirTag Bluetooth trackers and it looks likeOnePlus just revealed the 9 Pro early and Apple might be the reason
OnePlus jumped the gun on its own March 23 event by a week, and it might have something to do with a'Seinfeld' AI
Seinfeldfirst aired in 1989, running for nine seasons. Its popularity has prevailed, so many years lAmazon finally confirms Prime Day is delayed
We thought Prime Day was going to be delayed back in April, then we heard Amazon had decided to pushThe internet isn't happy with Spotify's new design
Listen, TikTok is great and all, but not everything needs to be TikTok. Here's looking at you, SpotiTikTok will soon force personalized ads on its users
Enjoy watching videos by TikTok’s biggest stars like Charli D'Amelio? Well, TikTok hopes you&r