China’s abrupt COVID-19 shift hits supply chains from solar to coal
22 Dec 2022
China’s
reopening is disrupting energy markets as the abrupt shift from Covid Zero
shutters industry and upends the usual flow of commodities.
A dramatic
surge in infections is having a short-term impact on the supply chain for solar
companies, the China Silicon Industry Association said in a statement on
Wednesday.
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Many manufacturers of the wafers used in solar panels have curtailed
operations, with some producing at just 60 percent to 70 percent of capacity,
it said.
The supply
shock comes at the tail end of a record-breaking year for solar installations
in China. To keep up production, some renewables firms such as Longi Green
Energy Technology Co. are operating closed loops in their factories to keep the
virus at bay.
Coal markets
are also being affected by its rampant spread. Mysteel reports that production
of coking coal used by the steel industry has halved in the top mining hub of
Shanxi, with 10 mines suspending output and another 31 cutting back.
Miners have
put workers in closed loops, but the impact could last for about another two
weeks until the outbreak wanes, Mysteel said.