China’s green push may cut global fossil use by 2030, says think-tank

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Wind turbines are seen at a wind farm in Suichuan County, in China’s central Jiangxi province on July 17, 2025.

A domestic milestone was reached in the first half of 2025, when China’s solar and wind generation more than met demand growth for power.

PHOTO: AFP

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The stage may be set for the world’s use of fossil fuels to begin dropping in about five years’ time, thanks to China’s rapid adoption of renewables and its increasing reliance on electricity, clean energy think-tank Ember said in a report on Sept 9.

The researchers identified how fossil fuel consumption could be pressured into long-term decline through the scale and pace of China’s own green transition and its dominant role in exporting clean energy to other countries.

In 2023, one-quarter of emerging countries had leapfrogged the United States in terms of the electrification of their economies, helped by the availability of cheap Chinese clean-tech, according to Ember.

A domestic milestone was reached in the first half of 2025, when China’s solar and wind generation more than met demand growth for power, cutting fossil fuel usage by 2 per cent, the researchers said.

It follows a massive investment in clean energy, which totalled US$625 billion (S$801 billion) in 2024 or almost a third of the world’s total.

“China’s surge in renewables and whole-economy electrification is rapidly reshaping energy choices for the rest of the world, creating the conditions for a decline in global fossil fuel use,” Ember said.

If current trends hold, “it’s likely that the world’s fossil fuel demand will be in structural decline by 2030”.

Cutting fossil fuel use is necessary to reduce carbon emissions and avoid the worst consequences of a hotter planet. But the path to net zero has been complicated by various factors, from indifference and even hostility to the energy transition in some countries such as the US, to concerns over the costs of its implementation in others. That has put a huge onus on the world’s biggest polluter to effectively ride to the rescue.

China has been responsible for most of the global growth in fossil fuel use for a decade, Ember said. In its reading, as that demand fades, “the implications for governments basing their economic growth plans on exporting coal, oil and gas are plain to see”, it said.

Moreover, China is disproving the notion that green goals and economic growth are at odds, according to the report. Instead, it has taken a path that has allowed the two to reinforce each other and create “self-sustaining momentum”. BLOOMBERG

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