By Dhiyanesh Ravichandran on Tuesday, 10 October 2023
Category: Buzz

No looking back: Energy transition in China

In many ways, this year was the tipping point for renewable energy. The world has woken up to the imperative of energy transition, and countries around the world have made progress on this front, albeit in different degrees. We take stock of their situation in this multi-part series.

Energy Storage 

A global force to reckon with in the energy storage and battery manufacturing, China is reportedly taking big steps this year to jack up its domestic capacities. In the first five months of 2023, the country announced new energy storage projects worth 19 GW, up by 93.5 percent from the same period last year. By 2027, China is expected to boast a total capacity of 97 GW, according to Haitong Securities Co. Ltd.

In terms of monetary value, China's energy storage market surpassed $93.9 billion in 2022, and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 18.8 percent from 2023-32. Some of the key push factors behind the country's tremendous energy storage capacity addition are as following:


More specifically, China's installed BESS capacity stood at 12 GW as of May this year, up more than a third from the 8.7 GW installed capacity at the end of 2022. Electro-chemical (battery) energy storage holds higher share in the country's energy storage capacity additions, led by Lithium-ion, Sodium Sulphur, Flow batteries, and others.

In 2023, China has witnessed the following project developments in the new energy storage (battery-based) market:

E-mobility

As the frontrunner of electric mobility in the world, China registered a y-o-y EV sales growth of 29 percent in Q1 2023. According to Counterpoint Research, China's EV sales is expected to exceed 8 million units in 2023, up from 6.9 million units sold in 2022. Pure electric vehicles (BEVs) account for nearly 70 percent of the new energy vehicles (NEVs) sold in the country, although the share of plug-in hybrid EVs (PHEVs) continue to grow this year.

Having said that, the growth of the Chinese EV market is predicted to slow down this year, thanks to the effective withdrawal of government subsidies for NEVs.

Some of the key factors determining the growth and trajectories of the Chinese EV market are as following:


Some of the most important developments that has happened in the Chinese EV industry so far are as following:


Green Hydrogen

China is the largest producer and consumer of hydrogen in the world, making about 34 million tons of hydrogen (2021) in one year, although a meagre 0.1 percent is 'green', produced via electrolysis powered by renewable energy. Given the abundance of RE in the country, China is well placed to take the lead in green hydrogen development in the coming years.

According to the World Economic Forum's latest report (June 2023), green hydrogen is playing a pivotal role in helping China realize its strategic ambition to peak carbon emissions by 2030 and become carbon-neutral by 2060. It identifies three main constraints for the expansion of green hydrogen in China – cost, market demand, infrastructure and industry standards and certification.

The country's current H2 production capacity (cumulative) stands at about 220 MW, with 750 MW under construction, according to IEA estimates. Here are some of the recent developments from the country's emerging green hydrogen industry:



To see other articles in this series, click here. ​

Leave Comments