• scholar@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    China isn’t exactly transitioning, they added 78GW of new coal power plants last year and are building more this year. They installed massive amounts of solar as well because it’s cheap and they need massive amounts of power.

      • scholar@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        That’s by percentage, if you look at absolute generation it looks more like this:

        Coal is a smaller percentage of the total mix than in 2000 because they basically weren’t using solar or wind at all back then. They are still increasing their consumption of coal in absolute figures by a significant amount.

        • Dessalines@lemmy.ml
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          1 day ago

          Percentage / proportion over time is more pertinent for the term “transitioning” than absolute levels.

          • scholar@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Solar and Wind started at 0.06% in 2001. That was 0.75TWh. In 2025 they made 21.83% with 2310.4TWh. That’s a lot of electricity and explains why the other generation methods have gone down proportionally. This doesn’t indicate a transition because the total generation has massively risen too. Hydro over the same period grew from 277.43TWh to 1397.06TWh, but by percentage dropped from 18.74% to 13.2% - I don’t think anyone would argue that China is transitioning away from hydro.

            For a transition to occur we would need to see a plateau and reduction in coal generation, not a 5x increase.

            • zedcell@lemmygrad.ml
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              1 day ago

              China is still a developing nation, and its countryside is still being modernised and connected into the wider infrastructure framework of the urban centres. This requires constant expansion of the electricity grid and output. It is not a mature, developed nation with little need to expand energy production like vast chunks of Europe and the US.