Chinese officials have outlined plans to invest nearly $500 billion in electric power infrastructure — including roughly $90 billion in smart grid technologies — by 2020, a strategy experts say could significantly improve the nation’s energy efficiency and cement a dominant position in the smart grid market. According to a report by the Center for American Progress, Chinese leaders view smart grid technology as “the next industrial revolution,” and see an opportunity to emerge as the world leader in the supply chain for smart grid equipment and technology. Using increasingly sophisticated sensors, computers, and wireless devices, smart grid technology is able to transmit and distribute electricity more efficiently to customers and adapt operations to fit changing conditions, from shifting weather to user demand. Experts say this ability will become increasingly critical as renewable energy technologies are integrated into energy delivery networks. That is particularly true in China, where energy demand continues to increase and government leaders have set a target of obtaining 9.5 percent of total electricity production from renewable sources by 2015.
China to Invest $90 Billion In Smart Grid Technologies by 2020
More From E360
-
Climate
How Climate Risks Are Putting Home Insurance Out of Reach
-
INTERVIEW
Inside the Plastics Industry Playbook: Delay, Deny, and Distract
-
Biodiversity
Freeing Captive Bears from Armenia’s Backyards and Basements
-
Food & Agriculture
In Indonesia’s Rainforest, a Mega-Farm Project Is Plowing Ahead
-
FILM CONTEST WINNER
In the Yucatan, the High Cost of a Boom in Factory Hog Farms
-
INTERVIEW
In the Transition to Renewable Energy, China Is at a Crossroads
-
E360 Film Contest
In India, a Young Poacher Evolves into a Committed Conservationist
-
E360 Film Contest
The Amazon Rainforest Approaches a Point of No Return
-
Biodiversity
Shrinking Cod: How Humans Are Impacting the Evolution of Species
-
Cities
‘Sponge City’: Copenhagen Adapts to a Wetter Future
-
INTERVIEW
On Controlling Fire, New Lessons from a Deep Indigenous Past
-
Solutions
Paying the People: Liberia’s Novel Plan to Save Its Forests