China JUST ANNOUNCED The World's LARGEST Wind Power That SHOCKS The World | HUGE THREAT To The US!



China JUST ANNOUNCED The World’s LARGEST Wind Power That SHOCKS The World | HUGE THREAT To The US!

#china #energy #windpower

China continues to push the envelope with its nationalist measures, such as relying on its own energy resources.

Along with this ambition, it intends to lower its carbon footprint by focusing on greener energy sources, and it appears to be making good on that promise by building a gigantic wind farm. Wind energy has been a recurring green topic for investors looking for possibilities that meet environmental, social, and governance criteria.

This could provide extra motivation for investors to consider China as a potential investment destination.

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Thank You For Watching Our Video; China JUST ANNOUNCED The World’s LARGEST Wind Power That SHOCKS The World | HUGE THREAT To The US!

Wind energy is one of the world’s fastest-growing renewable energy sources.

According to the 16th annual Global Wind Energy Council report, 93 Gigawatts of new capacity was installed globally in 2020 alone, a 53% increase year over year.

Furthermore, over the last ten years, the worldwide wind energy market has nearly doubled in size.

As a result of this expansion, the world now has 743 Gigawatts of wind power capacity.

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Now, China is planning the world’s largest wind farm, a facility large enough to power the entire country of Norway.

Chaozhou, a city in China’s Guangdong province, has announced plans for a 43.3 gigaton facility in the Taiwan Strait.

The 10km long farm will be located between 75 and 185 kilometers offshore and will feature thousands of powerful turbines.

To put things into perspective, one gigawatt is one billion watts, and it takes approximately three million solar panels to create this much electricity.

A giga ton can power 100 million LEDs or around 300,000 typical European dwellings.

These turbines will be able to run between 43 per cent and 49 per cent of the time due to their windy location.

China set a record by adding 16.9 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity last year, giving the country the world’s largest fleet of offshore wind turbines.

Utilities and local governments continue to pursue ambitious renewable expansion plans as costs fall in comparison to pricey coal and natural gas.

Because of the area’s peculiar topography, wind will be strong enough to run the turbines 3,800 to 4,300 hours per year, or 43% to 49% of the time, an extraordinarily high utilization rate.

Earlier this year, a city in Fujian province proposed a 1 trillion yuan which is approximately $138 billion project that included 50 gigatons of offshore wind.

Aside from offshore wind energy development, green hydrogen is one type of energy infrastructure being explored.

This new plan does not solely feature offshore wind development.

The much broader goal is for local governments to investigate the potential for further clean infrastructure, such as green hydrogen production, aquaculture farming, and an integrated energy island.

Speaking of green hydrogen production In China…

China sees hydrogen as a key β€œfrontier technology” in which it aspires to be a world leader.

Within the next decade, China plans to quickly expand its green hydrogen sector.

Government obligations to decarbonize, combined with the allure of rising demand for carbon-neutral hydrogen and related equipment, are driving related research and development and business endeavors.

Local policy and industry activities are already going much beyond the national strategy and its conservative aims, generating impetus for the green hydrogen economy.

China’s push towards green hydrogen will be distinguished by robust state-led support for market formation and technology development at every stage of the value chain.

State-owned firms and publicly sponsored Research and Development labs are racing to develop hydrogen technology in anticipation of a large industry ramp-up.

Private sector is also contributing to the rapid capacity expansion in green hydrogen production equipment, driven by bullish estimates for future demand in low-carbon hydrogen.

Europe’s edge in green hydrogen technology will dwindle as China boosts its research capabilities and pricing competitiveness.

The country now accounts for one-third of worldwide electrolyze manufacturing capacity and will become more competitive as production expands up.

According to Chinese industry analysts, it will take at least five years for domestic technology to catch up to global industry leaders.

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47 thoughts on “China JUST ANNOUNCED The World's LARGEST Wind Power That SHOCKS The World | HUGE THREAT To The US!”

  1. πŸ™„πŸ™„πŸ™„πŸ™„πŸ™„πŸ™„πŸ™„more bull!!! Go ahead China I want to see you fry your people's brains out with some wattsπŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ‘ŽπŸ–•

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  2. I would like to hear more about storage systems such as hydro and novel storage of heat energy as alternatives to batteries. Perhaps also small scale multimodal systems for rural applications.

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  3. I am taking what you say with a grain of salt, I guess this is a couple of year old? China is having great difficulties with their energy, I guess you have not noticed the black outs that occurred a few months ago. I don't believe what you are saying and see it as Chinese propaganda

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  4. The rule is to play your strongest suite.
    China is a country in the case of playing your strongest thing is to escape.
    And to bring your cash.
    The strongest suite for the US will be MADE IN U.S.A.
    CORRUPTION IN CHINA WILL NOT DO ANY FAVORS FOR THE ECONOMY OF THE COUNTRY. ITS CITIZENS ARE GETTING ROBBED BLIND.
    Technology is not a substitute for a well managed country and Communism is a failed ideology.

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  5. The development in the Taiwan straight sounds like political provocation to me. The Island of Taiwan is between 235 km (furthest) and 150 km from the Chinese mainland. A placement of 75 KM in the nearest zone would be just on the border, but 185km even at the furthest separation would be in Taiwan's own waters.

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  6. That s awesome . Wind energy has one big advantage over solar that it keeps on producing day and night . While solar is effective hardly for 5/ 7 hours of the day .

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  7. Now the last time I checked (yesterday) China got around 62% of its electricity from coal.
    By 2030 China will need more electricity than the whole of Australia solely for all those "data farms" keeping a close eye on everyone.
    Now in fairness, everything about China is "record-breaking" which is true.
    So it's no surprise it tops the charts on just about everything.
    Solar wind nuclear gas oil coal steal cement…It is the largest consumer of energy on the planet.
    But there is a fly in the ointment…" the grid".
    It was built for a different time…
    If I mention 'heatwaves' & 'blackouts' most will get the point perfectly.
    Sadly a few windmills here and there are not going to sort out those issues.
    But keep up the good work…nothing like a positive attitude .

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  8. Over a decade ago China was said to kill the global economy by the fastest housing construction and few years ago the same was said about Chinese huge network of fast rail system. China is great when it comes to white elephants or low quality mas production including its internal market.

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  9. China's manufacturing economy is finished. Chips Act means they can only assemble basic products. Demographics means they have no people of working age in ten years time. Zero Covid, property crashes, floods etc do not help. And if they invade Taiwan, sanctions will mean it's all over for China who imports 86% of its needs – in weeks. Labour costs in China are 15x higher than 1990 and productivity is one third of what it wants. China is a busted flush.

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  10. Located in the Taiwan Street? πŸ€”
    Is that really only a civil project?
    What think the people of Taiwan about this project?
    Looking in the map of this region you see that Taiwan is in posession of some islands direct at the chinese coast.
    China hat shelled them with artillery in the past.
    Perhaps peking is planning an even bigger project – a windmill field around complete Taiwan?
    😳

    Reply

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