China’s move towards carbon neutrality by 2060 can complement both energy security and economic goals, a new report by Wood Mackenzie states.
“When President Xi Jinping announced the country’s carbon neutrality goal, he was not simply saying that China would adjust its energy mix to reduce emissions,” WoodMac’s research director, Miaoru Huang, said in a media statement. “He was giving notice of the complete transformation of its economy and how it produces, transports, and consumes energy.”
In Huang’s view, this transformation or ‘dual circulation’ is the pivot point to China’s balancing act on its climate change goals, energy security concerns and economic ambitions.
According to the market analyst, on its current trajectory and not accounting for carbon neutrality, China’s oil-import dependency would exceed 80% by 2030, while half of its natural gas supply would be imported. However, the pursuit of carbon neutrality halves China’s oil demand by 2040 compared with Wood Mackenzie’s base case, with demand almost eliminated by 2050.
“For China to meet its carbon-neutral goal, it will need a 75% increase in electricity demand, compared to Wood Mackenzie’s base case, to replace fossil fuels. That equates to a staggering $6.4 trillion investment in new power generation capacity. Nuclear power will have a role to play but growth will primarily come from solar, wind and storage,” the report reads.
Building the production capacity to achieve these goals wouldn’t be a problem for the Asian giant, WoodMac says. The country is already the world’s largest manufacturer of wind turbines and dominates global solar module production, with around two-thirds of photovoltaic panels produced domestically. At the same time, Chinese manufacturers own significant capacity overseas.
China also leads the supply and processing of most of the raw materials needed for batteries and other zero-carbon technologies. Three-quarters of global lithium-ion battery production, half of the world’s electric vehicles and almost 70% of all solar panels are made in China.
“The difficult part is ensuring a secure and competitive supply of raw materials for this growth. This includes the five essential metals – copper, aluminum, nickel, cobalt and lithium,” the review states. “Most notably, China’s dependence on foreign miners for its copper supply is a major concern. This has fuelled the country’s determination to seek greater control of other raw materials.”
WoodMac estimates that China’s domestic and overseas equity production of mined copper is 16% of what it needs, leaving it net short of 7.5 million tonnes a year at current demand levels.
“If China can replicate its current global market share in battery and solar-panel production across the entire future value chain of clean energy, it would transform global energy supply, trade and industry,” Wood Mackenzie senior economist Yanting Zhou said in the press brief.