A document recently published by China’s State Council concerning the
planned use of the ocean under the country’s territorial jurisdiction
indicates that offshore wind power
plants are slated to be located and built in the seawater adjacent to
the coastal areas of northern Jiangsu province. Areas specifically cited
in the document include those adjacent to the cities of Lianyungang and
Yancheng.
The specific mention of such a plan in a document issued by
the highest administrative authority of the country is a clear signal
that the country is serious about developing offshore wind power on a large scale.
Jiangsu province boasts 954 kilometers of coastline and is located in
an area rich in wind energy resources. The 6,000 square kilometers of
sandy beaches that align the province’s coast account for one fourth of
China’s total. In addition, the more than 70 sandbanks lying off the
province’s coast are capable of supporting and deploying a wind power
capacity of 970 GW. As of 2010, Jiangsu province had already deployed
4.6 GW in offshore wind power capacity, ranking the region first in Asia
in that regard. A study indicates that the province is home to 34.7 GW
of wind energy resources in total.
The province sits on 21 GW of developable coastal wind power capacity,
with 14.7 GW or 70 percent located in and around the city of Yancheng
(including 1.7 GW onshore and 13 GW offshore). One of the eight 10 GW
wind power facilities planned in China is to be located in Yancheng.
Asia’s first 3 MW, 5 MW and 6 MW wind turbines were all manufactured
there. The National Center for Research and Development of Offshore Wind
Power Technology and Equipment will be completed and put into operation
soon, and the National Wind Power Equipment Quality Supervision and
Inspection Center is also under construction in the city.
The area running along the coast under the jurisdiction of Yancheng
includes 582 kilometers of coastline, and 4,550 square kilometers of
sandy beaches, accounting for 75 percent of the province’s total. As of
2011, the city had deployed 700 MW in onshore wind power capacity and
initiated 26 wind power projects with an overall investment of 15.2
billion yuan (approx. US$2.4 billion). The city’s new energy industry
recorded sales of more than 10 billion yuan (approx. US$1.6 billion) in
2011. At present, Yancheng is pushing ahead with its first four offshore
wind power franchise projects, in Binhai, Sheyang, Dafeng and Dongtai
counties, as well as the construction of three demonstration offshore
wind power plants. The seven projects have a combined capacity of 1.7 GW
and direct investment of 30 billion yuan.
Several of China’s energy powerhouses have undertaken wind power
projects in the wind resource-rich province, including Sinohydro Group’s
100 MW intertidal-zone wind power project in Rudong county, CGNPC’s
offshore project, also in Rudong county, China Three Gorges
Corporation’s offshore project in Xiangshui county, China Longyuan Power
Group’s 200 MW project in Dafeng county and State Power Investment
Corporation’s project in Binhai County, Yancheng, among others.
The coastal wind power sector in northern Jiangsu province still needs to overcome several obstacles in development, including: Challenges in anti-corrosion technologies for turbines and protection of facilities from typhoons Insufficient support facilities especially the capability of the grid to absorb the increase in generated wind power
Geographical limitations imposed by the existence of areas allocated
strictly for military use, ports, shipping lanes, enclosures of tideland
for cultivation and protected zones As of June 2015, Jiangsu province boasted a clean-energy power
capacity of 9.76 GW, including 3.63 GW originating from wind. The
province has the most offshore wind power capacity of any province in
China.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2015/09/china-plans-offshore-wind-power-plants-in-northern-jiangsu-province.html
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