A solar farm in Xining, Qinghai province. (Photo/Xinhua) |
China will
have 3,000 megawatts of solar thermal power installed capacity by 2015, with
the total market value reaching 45 billion yuan (US$7.22 billion), according to
a report released on Wednesday.
Most parts
of China are suitable for the development and use of solar energy, with 98% of
the country's territory recording an annual average of 1,000 kilowatt-hours or
above generated from solar radiation per square meter, according to a green
paper on climate change.
The paper,
released by the Social Sciences Academic Press, put the country's annual
average of energy generated from solar radiation per square meter at 1,500
kilowatt-hours, an amount possibly equal to the amount of energy consumed by an
average household in one year.
Western and
hinterland regions have more abundant solar energy resources, as such areas
generally feature terrains located at higher altitudes and less humid weather
than eastern and coastal areas, it reads.
The most
solar radiation energy is recorded in southern Tibet and the Golmud region in
Qinghai, while the least is recorded in the southwestern municipality of
Chongqing.
The green
paper also forecast more extreme weather in China in the coming centuries.
People and public facilities will be exposed to more risks brought about by
such weather as a result of the emission of more greenhouse gases.
The report
was released as nations are gearing up for a new round of climate change talks
at the United Nations Climate Change Conference, which will be held from Nov.
26 to Dec. 7 in Doha, Qatar.
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