Abstract
China’s energy revolution can be traced through the industrial dynamics operating in specific sectors, encompassing fossil fuels and non-fossil fuels. Having built the world’s largest coal industry China now faces the challenge of winding it down. In terms of oil and gas it is a matter of expanding to secure access to sources around the world. The principal achievements are the creation of new industries based on wind, solar photovoltaic and now a series of new technologies such as those based on light-emitting diodes, energy storage and electric vehicles. Much policy initiative is focused on building these new industries, as well as on reducing high levels of energy consumption (and carbon emissions) in key energy-intensive industries such as steel and cement.
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Notes
China National Renewable Energy Centre (2014) China Renewable Energy Industry Development Report 2014, Beijing.
See, for example, Matthew Wald, ‘Wind energy bumps into power grid’s limits’, New York Times, 26 August 2008, at: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/27/business/27grid.html
Wang C. et al. 2015. ‘The analysis of China wind power industry’, Journal of Chongqing University, 38(1) 148–154 (in Chinese).
Zheng, F. (2014), Vestas failed in the Chinese market. Foreign Investment in China, 9, 62–63.
China National Renewable Energy Centre, 2014. China Renewable Energy Industry Development Report, Beijing.
See an estimate based on data from China Energy Yearbook 2011 by Guo, G. F. and Wang, Y. P. (2013) Analysis on the Potential and Target of China’s Industrial Energy-saving in 12th Five-Year Plan Period (2011–2015), China Industrial Economics, 300(3), 46–58.
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© 2015 John A. Mathews and Hao Tan
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Mathews, J.A., Tan, H. (2015). China’s Energy Producing and Using Industries — Industrial Dynamics. In: China’s Renewable Energy Revolution. Building a Sustainable Political Economy: SPERI Research & Policy. Palgrave Pivot, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137546258_3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137546258_3
Publisher Name: Palgrave Pivot, London
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