Solar Feed In Tariff Website

Solar Feed In Tariff, Solar Energy And Renewable Energy Resource Website
  • rss
  • Home
  • Feed In Tariff
  • Solar Energy
  • Solar Global
  • Investments
    • Solar Investment Bond – From 10,000 Euros
    • Photovoltaic Investment Product – From 1 Million Euros
    • Solar Thermal Investment Opportunity – From 10 Million Euros
  • Solar Installers
  • Products
    • Eco Friendly Office Recycling Bins
  • Renewables
  • About
    • Contact
    • Links
    • Site Map
    • Forum

China introduces feed-in tariffs for wind power plants

admin | August 1, 2009

In a bid to increase profitability among its offshore wind farms, China has introduced a feed-in tariff system designed to make the generation of electricity via wind farms economically viable. China has recently been a leading advocate of the tariff system as the Beijing government seeks to diversify both the economy and the means of energy generation. With the New York Times last week announcing that green power is taking root in China, the move to encourage the take up of wind power generation comes as no surprise as the Asian government is supporting all kinds of renewable energy, especially solar and wind.

The Chinese wind feed-in tariff system will inevitably attract investments in the offshore wind generation industry there with the hope that it will enable the clean, wind energy to compete with that generated via coal fired plants. The guaranteed premium rate which will be offered to wind generators will be met by the existing grid operators with the additional cost being spread over all electricity consumers. The idea is that bigger, more profitable wind plants will receive a more generous tariff rate in order to help them catch up with the bigger wind farms.

The tariff payments are set at around 0.51 Yuan the equivalent of £0.05 per unit of electricity fed in to the grid, depending on the size of the wind farm. Compared with the rate paid for coal fired electricity (0.34 Yuan) the wind farms will e set to receive a generous payment. The announcement by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) stated that the scheme will,

“change current inconsistent pricing, foster clear expectations and facilitate investments in the sector”.

The previous system which operated regarding wind power electricity purchasing involved public bidding using low-rate tariffs which did not enable most wind farms to gain grid connectivity, a hindrance which meant that at least 20 per cent of China’s wind power producers were unprofitable. With the feed-in tariff system generally regarded as by far the most effective means of generating capital in green energy, China will be set to succeed in its bid to diversify its economy and become a major player in the world of green energy production.

  • Submit this to Script & Style
  • Share this on Blinklist
  • Share this on del.icio.us
  • Digg this!
  • Post this on Diigo
  • Share this on Reddit
  • Buzz up!
  • Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon
  • Share this on Technorati
  • Share this on Mixx
  • Post this to MySpace
  • Submit this to DesignFloat
  • Share this on Facebook
  • Tweet This!
  • Subscribe to the comments for this post?
  • Share this on Linkedin
  • Seed this on Newsvine
  • Share this on Devmarks
  • Add this to Google Bookmarks
  • Add this to Mister Wong
  • Add this to Izeby
  • Share this on Tipd
  • Share this on PFBuzz
  • Share this on FriendFeed
  • Mark this on BlogMarks
  • Submit this to Twittley
  • Share this on Fwisp
Categories
Alternative Energy Feed In Tariff, Alternative Energy Technologies, Environmental Investments
Tags
China, feed in tariff, government grants, green energy, NDRC, offshore wind, renewable energy, wind farm, wind power, wind turbine
Comments rss
Comments rss
Trackback
Trackback

« US Solar Forum to highlight grid parity Feed-in Tariffs to ‘open up renewable energy generation’ »

Leave a comment

You can use these tags : <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Navigation

  • Alternative Energy Feed In Tariff
  • Alternative Energy Technologies
  • Environmental Investments
  • Solar Feed In Tariff
  • UK Green Policy
  • Worldwide Green Policy

Search

Concentrated Photovoltaics Conference

Easy way to make renewable energy

Easy to make solar enery - click here

Solar Feeds Network

rssvalid xhtml 1.1 design by website design company, net9design Powered By Clear Web Services