World News04.07.2024
China Three Gorges Renewables to build 8GW solar PV project in Inner Mongolia

QAZAQ GREEN. Chinese state-owned power company China Three Gorges Renewables has announced a plan to build a 8GW solar PV project in Inner Mongolia, China, reports PV Tech.
Located in Ordos, the solar PV project will be part of a proposed large-scale energy project also housing 4GW of wind, 4GW of coal-fired power and 5GWh of battery energy storage.
Construction of the project will begin in September. It is expected that the project will be operational by June 2027. Power generated by this project will be transferred to the Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei provinces via an ultra-high voltage power transmission line, according to China Three Gorges Renewables.
China Three Gorges Renewables will invest RMB79.8 billion (US$10.98 billion) in the energy project, taking a 56% stake, with the remaining 44% controlled by Inner Mongolia Energy Group.
Aside from this project, China recently commissioned the world’s largest solar project, a massive 5GW facility in the north-west of the Xinjiang region. The huge project covers 200,000 acres, and has been built in a desert area of Ürümqi, the regional capital, by the state-owned Ürümqi Zhonglvdian New Energy Co Ltd. The facility is expected to produce around 6,090GWh of electricity annually, enough to meet more than a quarter of the annual energy demand of Los Angeles, according to the city government.
Norwegian analyst DNV has predicted that China will increase its renewable energy installations more than fivefold by 2050. According to DNV’s Energy Transition Outlook China 2024, the contribution of solar to Chinese domestic electricity production will increase from 5% today to 38% by 2050, and new solar power installations will account for 58% of all new electricity generation capacity additions between now and the end of this decade.
CAREC and Central Asian universities sign new memoranda on green skills development
100,000 jobs and a skills gap: how Central Asia is preparing for the renewables boom
No transition without transmission: How Central Asia is building its energy future
ADB to invest $5.5bn across 15 projects in Kazakhstan
17 agreements worth over $2.3 billion signed at the opening of RES 2026 EXPO in Astana
World Bank to invest $1bn in Central Asia's energy integration
Kazakhstan and China to launch a 500 MW wind farm in Karaganda region
Kazakhstan and Tajikistan move toward clean power deal over Rogun HPP
Regional Ecological Summit 2026 opens in Astana
Solar pumps and drip irrigation help Kyrgyz farmers cut costs amid rising energy prices
Hormuz closure failed to trigger coal comeback as solar and wind filled the gap
Astana set to launch RES 2026 EXPO and ink key international deals
Central Asian countries to discuss energy transition at RES 2026 in Astana
Moldova surpassed 1 GW of installed renewable energy capacity
China begins building US$1 billion hydropower station in Cambodia
Thousands protest in Germany urging faster green shift
Scientists from Russia and Uzbekistan improved the stability of green energy systems by 24%
Kazakh startup ranks in GCIP global top 3 in Vienna
Kazakhstan poultry farm produces 15 million kWh of energy from waste
China, Spain expand partnership in solar and wind power