Strolling around the Junma Solar Power Station located in the Kubuqi Desert in Ordos, North China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, it's hard for visitors to imagine that the area, now covered with blue solar panels and green vegetation, was once being totally barren and called the "sea of death".
Will China build a coal power station in Mongolia?
Chinese investors plan to construct a gigantic 4,800 MW coal power station in southern Mongolia during the next decade. It will be supplied with coal from Mongolia but the electricity generated is exclusively transmitted to China.
What can solar panels do for Mongolia?
The project has also fixed more than 1,000 hectares of sand. The solar panels do far more than just generate electricity. Local residents have been able to plant herbs and shrubs under the panels and cash crops like desert false indigo and Mongolian milk vetch between the arrays.
China's CHN Energy has energized the 3 GW Mengxi Lanhai Solar Plant, the largest single-site solar power project in China and the second largest in the world. The project in Ordos, Inner Mongolia, is a key part of China's “West-to-East Power Transmission” initiative and is expected to generate 5.7 TWh per year, powering about 2 million households.
How much did China invest in a solar project?
The project in Ordos, Inner Mongolia, required a total investment of approximately CNY 12 billion ($1.6 billion). China's CHN Energy has energized the 3 GW Mengxi Lanhai Solar Plant, the largest single-site solar power project in China and the second largest in the world.
Why is China building a solar power plant?
The construction comes as China - already a world leader in renewable energy innovation and production - has been ambitiously expanding its solar and wind power projects across the country to achieve clean climate targets over the past years.
How much did CHN Energy Invest in Mengxi Lanhai solar project?
CHN Energy has connected the 3 GW Mengxi Lanhai solar facility to the grid after 14 months of construction. The project in Ordos, Inner Mongolia, required a total investment of approximately CNY 12 billion ($1.6 billion).