Carbon Emission Reduction Strategy for Energy Users in China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- One focuses on the development trend of national policies, including the carbon trading system, renewable energy development planning and fiscal support for renewable energy, etc. Weng et al., Lo, Liu et al., Zhang et al., and Zhao et al., reviewed the development of China’s carbon trading market and introduced the status of China’s carbon trading market [17,18,19,20,21,22]. Some of them provided policy recommendations based on analysis and some focused on the policies and planning for renewables. Overall reviews of renewable energy subsidy policies are made by Shen et al., and Zeng et al. [23,24]. Others paid attention to renewable energy incentive policies, and analyzed the opportunities and challenges for energy users [25,26,27,28]. They are all primarily inclined to policy analysis; due to the changeable market, there have been many policy updates.
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2. Policy Review
2.1. Carbon Trading System
2.2. Guarantee Mechanism of Renewable Energy Power Consumption
- For most of provinces, the ratios of renewable energy power consumption to total power consumption present increasing trend. However, for others, like Heilongjiang, Zhejiang, Hubei, Hunan, etc., due to the rapid growth of energy consumption, the newly added renewable power generation cannot meet the increase in electricity demand. Therefore, the ratio decreases.
- Achieving the goals for 2019 and 2020 is not a big problem for some provinces. In 2018, some provinces have already exceeded the targets for 2019, even for 2020.
- Non-hydro renewable energy consumption shows a totally different situation. Almost for all provinces, the targets for the coming years are higher than the present values. Great efforts should be made in the coming years.
- Though China’s energy demand has surged, and the proportions of (non-hydro) renewable power consumption in total power demand keep growing.
2.3. Financial Support for Renewable Energy
3. Energy Structure in China
4. Case Study
4.1. What Should be Considered
4.2. Solutions to Carbon Emissions
5. Cost Analysis of Renewable Energy
5.1. Basic Assumption
5.2. Analysis Results
6. Conclusions
- Cost is an essential factor. The costs of introducing distributed photovoltaic power generation vary a lot due to the natural conditions. Guangzhou in this case shows an unoptimistic result with poor sunshine. The cost of renewable energy will still be high, especially with diminishing national and local subsidies. The energy users will pay for the cost gap between coal-fired electricity and renewable energy electricity, instead of the government.
- The carbon price in pilots is relatively low and cannot reflect the actual value. It is still more cost-efficient for energy users to buy carbon credits or pay the penalty instead of introducing renewable energy by themselves. Although the current carbon price is low, buying carbon allowances is not a long-term solution. With diminishing subsidization, the users will gradually be responsible for the cost. In the future, with a stricter cap, participants in carbon trading markets may become competitive and the price will reflect the actual value. Therefore, the emitters may face higher purchasing cost to reach the standard. Carbon emission reduction costs will become an important part of enterprise expenditure. Enterprises should prepare in advance about how to cut carbon emissions in the long term and try to find partners.
- The assessment results will be closely related to corporate credit and image. The energy consumers should also think highly of their social responsibility. Enterprises with a lower proportion of renewable energy consumption to total will be included in a poor credit record in the future. Therefore, the carbon reduction is not only related to cost.
- In the long term, even future plant site selection will be related to the distribution of renewable energy. As mentioned in the results part, the natural condition plays a crucial role in the cost. The distribution of renewable energy resources may affect the geographical distribution of enterprises in the future. Regions with plenty of sunshine or wind will have more advantages. The carbon intensity of electricity in these regions will be lower. Therefore, energy consumers have less pressure on renewable energy imports or carbon emissions. Even if the energy consumers cannot meet the requirement, they can introduce more cost-efficient renewable energy into factories to reduce carbon emissions.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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City/Province (Time) | Covered Sectors |
---|---|
Kickoff (2011.10) | National Development and Reform Commission Notice on Carbon Emissions Trading Pilot Work |
Shenzhen (2013.06) |
|
Shanghai (2013.11) | 2013–2015 |
| |
2013–2015 | |
| |
Beijing (2013.11) | 2013–2015 |
| |
2016–2018 | |
| |
Tianjin (2013.12) |
|
Guangdong (2013.12) | 2013–2015 |
| |
2016 | |
| |
2017–2018 | |
| |
Hubei (2014.04) | 2013–2015 |
| |
2016 | |
| |
2017 | |
| |
Fujian (2014.04) |
|
Chongqing (2014.06) |
|
Kickoff (2017.12) | National Development and Reform Commission National Carbon Emission Trading Market Construction Plan (Power Industry) |
Parameter | Unit | Value | |
---|---|---|---|
Lifetime of system | year | 25 | |
System degradation | per year | 0.5% | |
O&M cost | RMB/W | 0.75 | |
Lifetime of inverter | year | 10 | |
Inverter | RMB/W | 0.75 | |
Loan proportion | - | 20% | |
Loan interest | - | 7% | |
Loan years | year | 5 | |
Discount rate | Per year | 6.5% | |
Annual electricity production | Beijing * | kWh/kW/year | 1349 |
Guangzhou * | kWh/kW/year | 902 | |
Wuhan * | kWh/kW/year | 1198 | |
Shanghai * | kWh/kW/year | 1176 | |
Electricity price (from power grid) | Beijing | RMB/kWh | 0.646 |
Guangzhou | RMB/kWh | 0.620 | |
Wuhan | RMB/kWh | 0.645 | |
Shanghai | RMB/kWh | 0.698 | |
* National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL):
|
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Zhao, F.; Liu, F.; Hao, H.; Liu, Z. Carbon Emission Reduction Strategy for Energy Users in China. Sustainability 2020, 12, 6498. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166498
Zhao F, Liu F, Hao H, Liu Z. Carbon Emission Reduction Strategy for Energy Users in China. Sustainability. 2020; 12(16):6498. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166498
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhao, Fuquan, Feiqi Liu, Han Hao, and Zongwei Liu. 2020. "Carbon Emission Reduction Strategy for Energy Users in China" Sustainability 12, no. 16: 6498. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166498
APA StyleZhao, F., Liu, F., Hao, H., & Liu, Z. (2020). Carbon Emission Reduction Strategy for Energy Users in China. Sustainability, 12(16), 6498. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166498