{"id":48341,"date":"2009-12-05T22:26:54","date_gmt":"2009-12-06T05:26:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=48341"},"modified":"2009-12-05T22:45:06","modified_gmt":"2009-12-06T05:45:06","slug":"china-is-going-green","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2009\/12\/china-is-going-green\/","title":{"rendered":"Wind Power Winds up China’s Competitors"},"content":{"rendered":"
Andrew Peaple reports on the side effects to China’s green push for wind power. From the Wall Street Journal<\/strong><\/a>:<\/p>\n Beijing has big plans for wind power as a renewable energy of the future, but China may already have too much of a good thing.<\/p>\n At home, China’s power-transmission infrastructure can’t handle the intermittent electricity supply already being generated from wind. It is estimated that 30% of last year’s wind-power supply went unused.<\/p>\n Despite that bottleneck, Beijing wants more. The government hopes to see 100 gigawatts of wind-power capacity installed in China by 2020, a more than eightfold increase from 2008, making wind the third most important source of power in China behind coal and hydroelectric. Even by next year, the amount of wind-power equipment being made will be twice what the nation can install, according to the central government.<\/p>\n That has implications abroad. Foreign rivals are raising concerns that Chinese producers will export their excess capacity at cheap prices. Wind power was one of the industries cited last week by the European Chamber of Commerce in China as likely to stir trade tensions.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n