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VOL.3 April 2011
Reap the Wind
China's 12th Five-Year Plan moves from rapid GDP growth to improving livelihoods. Part of this process is developing clean energy

The offshore wind farm in Shanghai (COURTESY OF SINOVEL )

 
Developing clean energy, especially wind power, occupies a prominent position in China's 12th Five-Year Plan, the country's development guideline for the next five years starting 2011. During its 11th Five-Year Plan period from 2006-10, China's wind power industry has already moved from trailing the pack to being a world leader.
 
"[The wind power industry has] no carbon emission, no water pollution, no non-renewable resource consumption and China has great market demands for electricity. More importantly, we have support from the state. All these greatly contributed to China's rapid development of the wind power industry," Tao Gang, Senior Vice President of Sinovel Wind Group Co. Ltd., told ChinAfrica.
 
Statistics show that China ranks the world No.1 in terms of wind power installed capacity. According to Chinese Renewable Energy Industries Association (CREIA), by the end of 2010 China's accumulative installed capacity of wind power reached 41.83 million kw, exceeding that of the United States.
 
In 2010 alone, newly added wind power installed capacity hit 16 million kw, more than the combined amount of Europe (9.9 million kw) and the United States (5 million kw).
 
"Against the backdrop of rapid economic growth and great increase in power demand, China's wind power industry has maintained rapid growth in recent years, which plays an irreplaceable role in the country's energy diversification, environmental protection and energy saving and emission reduction," said Li Junfeng, Secretary General of CREIA in an interview with www.dt360.com, a website promoting low-carbon life in China.
 
According to Li, China's total wind power installed capacity of 41.83 million kw means annually reducing 31.29 million tons of coal usage, which helps cut down more than 90 million tons of carbon dioxide emission, 33,000 tons of suspended particulate matters, 64,000 tons of sulfur dioxide and 60,000 tons of nitrogen oxides.

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