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China to build one of the world’s biggest solar power stations
SHANGHAI—China intends to
build one of the world’s biggest solar power stations at a cost of 765
million dollars, state press reported Tuesday.
The 100-megawatt facility, to be built in Dunhuang, an oasis town in
northwest China’s Gansu province, would be a collaborative effort
between the local government and Beijing’s Zhonghao New Energy
Investment, Xinhua news said.
The project would take five years to construct, it added. The report
followed plans announced by Australia last month to build the world’s
biggest solar power station, a 154-megawatt behemoth, which the builder
said could reduce greenhouse gas emissions by about 400,000 tonnes a
year.
Australia, like the United States, has refused to sign the Kyoto
Protocol on climate change, and the station is part of Australia’s
rethink on national environmental policies, which are under sharp
criticism at home and abroad.
China for its part, which signed the Kyoto accord in 1998, is the
world’s second-largest emitter of climate-change gases after the United
States, and the world’s largest coal burner.
About 70 percent of China’s energy comes from burning the fossil fuel
and hundreds more coal-fired power plants are being built every year.
China has set goals for renewable energy to account for 16 percent of
its overall energy production by 2020 and to increase energy efficiency
per unit of gross domestic product (GDP) by 20 percent over the next
four years.
But already there are signs that those targets are being missed, with
energy per unit of GDP rising by 0.8 percent in the first half of the
year, according to government figures.—APP |