China will add 15GW of distributed wind power capacity in the next decade
Wood Mackenzie's power and Renewable Energy group (WoodMac) recently released an in-depth research paper titled "The Rise of Distributed Wind Power in China, but with Little impact". Li Xiao-yang, senior analyst of the author of the report, predicted that China's newly added grid-connected capacity of distributed wind power will reach 15.1GW from 2018-2027, and enter the GW-level growth era from 2019.
Since July 2011, the Bureau of Energy has issued notices and guidance on decentralized wind power development for many times, aiming to clarify and improve policies related to decentralized wind power development, including construction scale, technical requirements, electricity price scheme, etc., so as to provide development basis for market developers. However, from project planning, wind resource assessment, feasibility analysis, obtaining supporting documents to project approval, there are many relevant government departments and market players involved, and the whole process is lengthy and time-consuming. Although the Energy Bureau has issued a notice to simplify the approval process for projects, it is still difficult for provincial authorities to implement. As of October 31, 2018, only eight provinces and cities have publicly released plans for distributed wind power projects, which either determine the goal of integrating distributed wind power into the grid, or determine the capacity scale and grid requirements of development projects in the region.
China will add 15GW of distributed wind power capacity in the next decade
Source: MAKE
Wood Mackenzie's power and Renewable Energy group (WoodMac) recently released an in-depth research paper titled "The Rise of Distributed Wind Power in China, but with Little impact". Li Xiao-yang, senior analyst of the author of the report, predicted that China's newly added grid-connected capacity of distributed wind power will reach 15.1GW from 2018-2027, and enter the GW-level growth era from 2019.
Since July 2011, the Bureau of Energy has issued multiple communications related to decentralized development and construction