China's green transition has Science, Nature wired up - RTHK
A A A
Temperature Humidity
News Archive Can search within past 12 months

China's green transition has Science, Nature wired up

2025-12-19 HKT 15:29
Share this story facebook
  • Farm workers collect goji berries in the shadow of a massive solar project outside Yinchuan, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. File photo: Reuters
    Farm workers collect goji berries in the shadow of a massive solar project outside Yinchuan, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. File photo: Reuters
China's unprecedented renewable energy expansion has drawn global scientific acclaim, with top academic journals Science and Nature highlighting the country's clean power transition this week as one of 2025's most inspiring milestones.

The renewables have helped bring the growth of greenhouse emissions to a virtual standstill in China and put a global carbon peak within reach, said Science Magazine, naming the renewable energy surge led by China the 2025 Breakthrough of the Year.

"China's mighty industrial engine is the driver," it stated, noting the country produces 80 percent of the world's solar cells, 70 percent of wind turbines and 70 percent of lithium batteries "at prices no competitor can match".

Nature Magazine also featured China's clean energy achievements as "feel-good science stories to restore your faith in 2025."

Renewables overtook coal as the world's top energy source for the first time this year, propelled by China's milestone of surpassing one terawatt of installed solar capacity in May, said the British scientific journal.

In the first six months of 2025 alone, China installed new solar systems with a capacity twice as much as the rest of the world combined, according to Nature.

"China and many developing countries are deploying solar and wind [and] electric vehicles at a pretty breakneck pace," Glen Peters, a climate scientist, was quoted as saying.

China's renewable energy expansion has shattered records, with wind and solar capacity surpassing thermal power for the first time in history by March.

By the end of June, China's installed wind and photovoltaic power generation capacity had reached 1.67 billion kilowatts, representing 13.6 percent higher than thermal power capacity.

Over the past five years, China has built the world's largest and fastest-growing renewable-energy system, with the share of renewables in installed power capacity rising from roughly 40 percent to 60 percent, according to the National Energy Administration (NEA).

"China's burgeoning exports of green tech are transforming the rest of the world, too," said the journal Science, with the NEA saying its wind and solar exports have helped the world avoid roughly 4.1 billion tonnes of carbon emissions in the past five years.

It has collaborated with over 100 countries and regions on green energy projects, helping reduce the average cost per kilowatt-hour of global wind and photovoltaic power generation by 60 percent and 80 percent, respectively, said Wang Hongzhi, head of the NEA, at a forum in October.

China has also provided more than 177 billion yuan in climate funding for other developing countries since 2016.

"Now, China makes them [clean energy technologies] for the world – better, vastly cheaper, and in staggering quantities," remarked a Science editor. (Xinhua)

China's green transition has Science, Nature wired up