North China's Inner Mongolia pledges to reduce energy intensity by 15% by 2025
07 Jun 2022
North China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region will take measures to
reduce its reliance on coal consumption and accelerate major renewable energy
projects to lower the region’s energy consumption per unit of GDP by 15 percent
by 2025 from five years ago, according to guidelines issued by the regional
government on Monday.
According to an action plan for energy conservation and emission reduction
during the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25), the region will lower the coal
consumption to below 75 percent, and increase non-fossil energy consumption to
about 18 percent of its total energy consumption by 2025.
Local authorities have stressed the need to strengthen monitoring of major
coal-consuming industries such as iron and steel making, while speeding up
renewable energy transition and upgrading 20 million kilowatts of coal-fired
power generating units before 2025.
Meanwhile the region will cut the emission of chemical oxygen, ammonia
nitrogen, nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds by 8 percent from five
years ago.
Inner Mongolia is rich in coal resource, recording 1.001 billion tons of coal
output in 2020, according to official data, ranking second after North China's
Shanxi Province, which is the country's largest coal production base. Coal
output of the two provinces combined accounted for 53.7 percent of China's
total coal production in 2020.
With the measures targeting energy conservation and emissions reductions, Inner
Mongolia plans to increase energy utilization efficiency, control pollutant emissions
and reach domestic advanced level of energy efficiency, as it strives to
transform its economy from a resource-dependent economic development model to
innovation-driven.
The agenda is in line with the nation’s pledge to advance carbon emissions peaking
and carbon neutrality initiatives, while ensuring energy security.
According to a package of measures to stabilize economic performance issued by
the State Council in May, coal will be produced while ensuring safety,
environment-friendliness and efficient utilization. A number of new hydropower
and coal-fired power projects will start this year.