Purpose
To provide support and training in the Gold Standard for CDM to increase the supply of quality energy efficiency and renewable energy projects accessing carbon markets.
The paper presents an overview of the world scene and reports on the latest developments in China of solar photovoltaic power
To provide support and training in the Gold Standard for CDM to increase the supply of quality energy efficiency and renewable energy projects accessing carbon markets.
The aim of the project is to propose Chines government a roadmap for full scale deployment of solar thermal and shallow geothermal technologies in buildings.
The purpose of this project is to transfer China and international best practices of village power to East Asia countries including Mongolia, North Korea, Korea, Japan etc., especially to set up a demonstration village power mechanism in Mongolia.
Develop a transparent and competitive financial market with diversified financial tools and risk mitigation instruments available for RE/EE projects in China and improve the access of sustainable Chinese RE/EE projects to different types of financial facilities.
Integrating a high share of renewable energy into the grid brings with it a host of technical challenges and a lack of widespread understanding of these issues is felt to be slowing the development of sustainable energy projects in many countries including China.
To make suggestions on improving ancillary services and to propose standards for grid connection of renewable energy into the Chinese smart grid using a province in Northeast China as a case study in their development
China Electric Power Research Institute
Briquetting is the process of converting low bulk density biomass into high density fuel briquettes that offer a high concentration of energy. As a greenhouse gas neutral replacement for conventional fossil fuels biomass briquettes will take on increasing importance in China’s next five-year plan. Currently the biomass briquette industry is underdeveloped due to a lack of favourable policies encouraging it.
China is one of the few emerging countries to have promoted the deployment of small wind power (SWP) technology going back as far as the early 1980s. Unlike many other RE technologies SWP is one that has been developed and owned by Chinese companies. SWP does not require the ideal wind conditions and the huge tracts of land of a large-scale wind farm. Developing SWP brings benefits in new technology deployment reduced GHG emissions job creation and an improved rural economy.
The Chinese government has issued medium and long term development plans for renewable energy (RE) which set targets of meeting 10% of primary energy demand with renewables by 2010 and 15% by 2020.
To undertake the preliminary research on the role that RE could have for China by 2030 underpinning a specific RE target such as 30% with a deep analysis of economic development targets energy resource availability and environmental factors as a sound reference for government policymaking.