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Quantifying stranded assets of the coal-fired power in China under the Paris Agreement target

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Listed:
  • Weirong Zhang
  • Yiou Zhou
  • Zhen Gong
  • Junjie Kang
  • Changhong Zhao
  • Zhixu Meng
  • Jian Zhang
  • Tao Zhang
  • Jiahai Yuan

Abstract

Coal-fired power plays a critical role in China’s compliance with the Paris Agreement. This research quantifies China’s stranded coal assets under different coal capacity expansion scenarios with an integrated approach and high-precision coal-fired power database. From a top-down perspective, firstly, the pathway of China’s coal-fired power capacity consistent with the global 2°C scenario is outlined and then those stranded coal-fired power plants are identified with a bottom-up perspective. Stranded value is estimated based upon a cash flow algorithm. Results show that if coal capacity stabilizes during 2020–2030, China will only incur a sizeable yet manageable stranded asset loss (USD 55 billion, 2020–2045). However, a continued increase of coal-fired capacity, of another 200∼400 GW, would significantly enlarge the loss by 2.7∼7.2 times. Further, once commissioned coal-fired power would form a resource lock-in effect. Thus, it will miss a short-term opportunity to develop new energy sources and induce a long-term need to invest in coal-fired power negative emission technology. Therefore, halting the construction of new coal-fired plants is a low-cost and no-regret option for China.Key policy insights Even with the largest coal-fired power capacity in the world, China still has the chance to decommission the coal-fired power units gradually at a relatively low cost.Continuing to build new coal-fired power units in China will increase the risk of stranded assets, especially for North China Grid and Northwest China Grid.Taking immediate action to stop building new coal-fired power units would be the low-cost and no-regret option for China.The local financial sector needs to work with the energy sector to gradually withdraw from the coal sector and support clean and renewable energy.

Suggested Citation

  • Weirong Zhang & Yiou Zhou & Zhen Gong & Junjie Kang & Changhong Zhao & Zhixu Meng & Jian Zhang & Tao Zhang & Jiahai Yuan, 2023. "Quantifying stranded assets of the coal-fired power in China under the Paris Agreement target," Climate Policy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 23(1), pages 11-24, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:tcpoxx:v:23:y:2023:i:1:p:11-24
    DOI: 10.1080/14693062.2021.1953433
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    Cited by:

    1. Xizhe Yan & Dan Tong & Yixuan Zheng & Yang Liu & Shaoqing Chen & Xinying Qin & Chuchu Chen & Ruochong Xu & Jing Cheng & Qinren Shi & Dongsheng Zheng & Kebin He & Qiang Zhang & Yu Lei, 2024. "Cost-effectiveness uncertainty may bias the decision of coal power transitions in China," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-12, December.

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