Yesterday the World Bank's Board of
Executive Directors approved a loan of US$87 million to China to
finance the Renewable Energy Scale-up Program, supplemented by a
grant of US$40.22 million from the Global Environment Facility
(GEF). The project's objective is to expand renewable electricity
supply in China efficiently, cost effectively and on a large
scale.
China is a world leader in the
development of renewable energy resources, especially small
hydropower. In the past, the focus of this development has been on
providing rural areas far from power grids with access to
electricity. However, China's abundant undeveloped resources of
small hydropower, wind, biomass, geothermal and solar energy also
could help the country reduce some of the environmental damage from
its overwhelming dependence on coal for large-scale, grid-based
power generation. Such a reorientation of China's renewable energy
development faces a number of technical, administrative, and
capacity constraints. To obviate these constraints, the Government
of China has devised a comprehensive renewable energy strategy for
making power generation from renewable energy sources competitive,
on an economic basis, with coal –fired power plants in supplying
electricity to large-scale power grids.
There are three main parts to the
Government's new renewable energy strategy. The first is to design
and put in place a legal and regulatory framework that encourages
the development of economic renewable energy resources in line with
power sector reforms that include the creation of a more
competitive power market. The second is to provide potential power
producers with access to advanced technology and techniques that
will make renewable energy more competitive with fossil fuels in
power generation. The third is to strengthen the capacity of
existing companies to develop, finance, construct and operate
renewable energy projects for power generation on a large scale,
and further open the sector to private investors.
The Renewable Energy Scale-up
Program will support the Government in implementing its strategy.
It is the largest such project supported by the Bank and GEF in
recent years. Over its lifetime, the project is expected to induce
an increased capacity of renewable electricity of more than 20 GW,
reduce carbon emissions by about 800 million tons, total suspended
particulate emissions by more than 800 million tons, sulfur oxide
emissions by more than 30 million tons, and nitrogen oxides
emissions by more than 6 million tons.
The project will take place in four
pilot provinces--Fujian, Inner Mongolia, Jiangsu and Zhejiang. It
will finance a 100 MW wind farm in Fujian province and a pilot 25
MW biomass-fired generation unit in Jiangsu provinces. It will also
provide grant funds which will support the government's efforts to
jump-start further development of projects and the transfer of
up-to-date wind and biomass technology from international
suppliers.
"The project has come to life
largely thanks to the commitment, dedication and hard work of many
people at many levels in China,"said Noureddine Berrah, World Bank
Task Manager for the Project. "The Project will support the
implementation of a national policy framework that would legally
require a share of electricity supply to be met from renewable
resources. It will also support cost reduction of equipment to
increase the competitiveness of high potential renewable energy
technologies over time through improvements to the quality and
performance of equipment and strengthening of the capability of the
service industries in China so to enable them to respond to the
increased market demand."
(China.org.cn June 17, 2005)
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