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In today’s issue, we look at how China plans to achieve “exponential growth” in yet another corner o͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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April 12, 2023
semafor

Net Zero

Climate
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Tim McDonnell
Tim McDonnell

Hi everyone, welcome back to Net Zero.

Exporters in China already corner the global market for solar panels and electric vehicle batteries. Now they’re turning their focus to a piece of climate hardware that faces no shortage of trade barriers and logistical headaches: wind turbines. As Xiaoying You reports, Chinese turbine manufacturers have big price advantages over their European rivals, and are poised for a major global expansion.

In today’s issue we also track how much G7 countries are spending on overseas fossil fuel projects, and text with the top sustainability executive at JPMorgan Chase about the bank’s green finance ambitions.

If you like what you’re reading, spread the word.

Warmups

U.S. regulators announced deep cuts today to tailpipe emissions standards for cars and trucks, which will effectively force automakers to drastically scale up their production of electric vehicles. The rules aim for sales of two-thirds of light-duty vehicles, half of buses, and one-quarter of heavy trucks to be EVs by 2032. Auto industry groups are likely to challenge the rules in court.

Top energy officials from the G7 countries, due to meet this weekend in Sapporo, are divided on which sources of energy to prioritize. The EU, U.S., and Japan are skeptical of a U.K. proposal to set a hard deadline to phase out coal power, while language in a draft communique supporting liquified natural gas was axed. Officials seem to be on the same page, however, on supporting nuclear power.

Kenny-Katombe Butunka/Reuters

China, India, Russia, Argentina, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and other top exporters of critical minerals are imposing a rising number of restrictions on their exports, according to an OECD study. In general, export restrictions are aimed at propping up domestic industries for clean tech manufacturing and recycling. But they threaten to stifle global trade and raise prices for minerals like palladium and cobalt.

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Evidence

G7 countries are off-track to meet a commitment they made in 2021 to end new public finance for overseas fossil fuel projects after 2022, according to an analysis this week by the research and advocacy groups E3G and Oil Change International. Fossil fuels received twice the finance of clean energy in 2022, and only the U.K., Canada, and France have published policies that should bring their overseas fossil finance to zero this year.

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Xiaoying You

What cheap Chinese wind turbines mean for the world

ADB/Flickr

THE NEWS

Chinese wind turbine makers, already industry leaders, are about to fast-track their global expansion, key industry players say.

After spending years developing a range of products and building global supporting networks, Chinese companies are on the cusp of an “exponential growth in exports,” a senior member of the country’s main wind industry trade body told me.

Overseas orders signed by Chinese wind turbine manufacturers in the first quarter of this year alone added up to nearly 2 gigawatts — almost their total export volume in 2022 — according to the Chinese research firm Windmango.

Western wind turbine giants have been hit by an array of obstacles, including COVID-19 lockdowns, supply chain disruptions, and spiking costs for commodities and shipping. Chinese companies, on the other hand, have weathered the storm relatively well on the back of robust home-based supply chains and the nation’s dominance in steel production and raw materials.

XIAOYING’S VIEW

Chinese companies already dominate the global solar-panel market, but while the country’s wind-turbine manufacturers occupy around half of the overall global onshore and offshore market and hope to grow that share, the path to expansion abroad is far more complicated.

China has had the world’s largest installed capacity for wind power since 2010, and is now home to more than one-third of the world’s wind power capacity. And it’s still growing: In 2021 and 2022, China’s cumulative growth in wind capacity was 3.6 times greater than that of the United States and 7.3 times greater than that of Europe over the same period.

Despite that fast growth, Chinese wind turbine makers still see opportunities abroad, although not necessarily in Western markets, where complicated laws, industry regulations, and what Chinese officials described as “trade barriers” have posed obstacles for Chinese firms’ expansion.

In the short term, most of their overseas orders will likely come from emerging economies in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia, where Chinese companies already have a presence due to Beijing’s Belt and Road economic program.

Gu Limin, a senior director at Envision Energy, one of China’s biggest wind turbine manufacturers, told me that he expected Chinese firms’ global market share to “be higher and higher in the next few years.” Offshore wind power, in particular, presents “huge opportunities,” he said.

The differences between the wind and solar industries, however, are instructive. Solar is a highly commoditized industry, shipping is relatively easy, and products are standardized. Wind turbines are more project-specific and harder to transport.

Chinese wind manufacturers “not only need to be familiar with the policies and legal frameworks of different countries but also participate in many other steps, such as financing, certification, logistics, and installation,” Qin Haiyan, secretary-general of the Chinese Wind Energy Association told me.

This is one of the obstacles for Chinese companies entering European and U.S. markets, but they have made some headway, Qin noted. For example, Mingyang, a major manufacturer, became the first Chinese company to supply wind turbines to a European offshore wind farm after helping build the Beleolico project off southern Italy.

KNOW MORE

Chinese companies boast what one industry insider dubbed a “landslide” price advantage over their Western counterparts. Their products cost less than half — and sometimes as little as a quarter — of Western equivalents.

One driver for the low cost is China’s production scale. According to Qin, more than two-thirds of the world’s wind turbines are manufactured in China, including those produced for foreign brands. Chinese firms also benefit from complete and concentrated domestic supply chains and clear government policies. To some extent, these advantages at home would be partially — but not entirely — negated abroad.

Goldwind, China’s largest wind turbine manufacturer, puts the industry’s success in context. It began life as a state-affiliated research institute in Xinjiang, a wind energy hub in western China, before being privatized in 1998. Like its domestic competitors, Goldwind witnessed a decade of breakneck growth from 2005 when Beijing threw its weight behind the renewables manufacturing industry.

Now, it has more than 10,000 employees around the world, is listed on the Shenzhen and Hong Kong stock exchanges, and last year sold wind turbines with a combined capacity of 13,870 megawatts — equivalent to about half of the U.K.’s entire wind power capacity. In the past few months, the company has inked major deals in Brazil, Vietnam, North Macedonia, and Uzbekistan.

ROOM FOR DISAGREEMENT

Worsening geopolitics pose obstacles to Chinese companies. In 2021, Texas blocked the development of a wind farm owned by a Chinese billionaire, citing an alleged national security threat. Late that year, the EU imposed anti-dumping tariffs on imported Chinese turbine towers after an investigation found they were being sold at “artificially low prices.”

Chinese companies also have their own disadvantages compared to Western firms, such as “a much smaller international presence and resulting business networks and contacts, as well as far less globalized supply chains,” Cosimo Ries, a renewable energy analyst at the consultancy Trivium China, told me.

THE VIEW FROM EUROPE

Major industry players told the Financial Times in September that European wind turbine manufacturers were “financially struggling and cutting jobs.” And last year, five Western firms warned in an open letter to the European Commission that they were “losing ground” to Chinese companies.

“It’s on price and financing conditions that the Europeans are really, really struggling,” when pitted against Chinese firms in third markets, Pierre Tardieu, Chief Policy Officer at WindEurope, a trade group, told me.

To address some of the concerns, European policymakers have taken steps, such as with the proposed Net Zero Industry Act, aimed at scaling up the manufacturing of clean technologies in the EU. “This is a dynamic situation,” Tardieu noted. “Nothing is closed.”

NOTABLE

  • An overseas expansion by Chinese companies — particularly Mingyang — could help develop larger turbines and drive prices lower, Norman Waite, an energy financial analyst, explained in a report published by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.
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Semafor Stat

Million metric tons of CO2 produced by the global electricity sector in 2022, according to an analysis today by Ember, an energy think tank. That is likely to be an all-time peak, the group said, as more renewable energy comes online.

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One Good Text

Heather Zichal, global head of sustainability at JPMorgan Chase.

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Green Shoots
Courtesy of Boston Metal

Top global steelmakers are hedging their bets on carbon-cutting technologies, investing in an array of approaches and sparking a race between startups to reach commercial scale. Steel production, which traditionally uses coal burned at very high temperatures to extract oxygen from iron ore, is responsible for about 9% of global CO2 emissions. But at the moment, no low-carbon alternative is commercially available.

One option is to replace coal in the smelting process with hydrogen gas. If the hydrogen was made using zero-carbon electricity to split H atoms out of water, the resulting steel would in turn be low or zero-carbon. In 2021, the Swedish steel company SSAB produced a small amount of steel this way, to be used by the automaker Volvo, and is aiming to reach full-scale production by 2026.

Meanwhile, two U.S. startups are racing each other on a different option that could cut out the expense and hassle of making and distributing hydrogen. Boston Metal and Electra both use renewables-generated electricity to excise impurities in iron. The technologies are different: BM works at high temperatures and requires 24/7 power, Electra works at low temperatures and can work with an intermittent power supply. But both have recently scored investments from major steelmakers — BM from ArcelorMittal and Electra from Nucor — and are busily building out pilot plants with the aim to reach commercial production within the next five years or so.

One other thing the startups share, said Sandeep Nijhawan, Electra’s CEO, is that tax incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act are skewed more favorably to hydrogen-based approaches. But steel itself is a key ingredient of the energy transition — for wind turbines, EVs, transmission pylons, etc. — and the world economy in general, so there’s more than enough business to go around.

“This is a trillion-dollar market,” he said. “It’s big enough that multiple solutions can coexist.”

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Glossary

This week the World Bank is expected to lower its ratio from 20% to 19%, which will free up about $4 billion in lending capacity. Climate advocates and economists have been pushing for this kind of change for years, which should give the Bank more leeway to support climate adaptation and carbon-reduction projects in developing countries. But it’s still a drop in the bucket compared to the hundreds of billions those countries need.

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— Tim (with Xiaoying You, Prashant Rao, and Jeronimo Gonzalez)

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