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Coal in China

China is the largest producer and consumer of coal and the largest user of coal-generated electricity in the world. The share of coal in the Chinese energy mix declined to 55% in 2021 according to the US Energy Information Agency.[1]

Coal supplies most of China's energy
Entrance to a small coal mine in China, 1999
A coal shipment underway in China, 2007
An operating power plant in China, 2005
Historical coal production of different countries

The Chinese central government has clamped down on the pace of new construction of coal plants and shifted to renewable, nuclear and natural gas sources.[2] At the same time, coal consumption reached new heights in China with carbon dioxide emissions from coal-fired electricity production estimated to top 4.5 billion tonnes in 2022. Reuters noted in 2022, "China is set to delight and depress climate trackers in equal measure in 2022 by setting new global records in both clean power utilisation and coal-fired electricity emissions." Solar and wind generated electricity surged by over 30% and 25% respectively during the period from January to October 2022 compared to the same period in 2021.[3] Despite central government attempts to clamp down on construction and shifting demand in the market to renewable, nuclear and natural gas sources,[2] 43 coal power units were announced in the first half of 2021 according to the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air in August 2021.[4]

In September 2021, China pledged to end financing of coal power plants abroad.[5] A study by Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air in April 2022 stated at least 15 overseas coal power plants had been cancelled since the announcement, while 18 projects which had secured financing and necessary permits could enter into construction.[6]

During the 2021 energy crisis in China, this dependency on coal units, depletion of reserves, increasing import prices, and slowdowns of shipment and production lead to widespread shutdowns of industrial energy use.[7][8]

History Edit

 
Site of the former Ministry of Coal Industry in Hepingli, Beijing; the ministry was abolished in 1998

Coal mines in pre-industrial China Edit

Ancient people in current China started using coal around 6,000 years ago.[9] Historians suspects that the Chinese were involved in the surface mining of coal around 3490 BC, pioneering the pre-modern world.[10] Fushan mine uses[clarification needed] to be pointed out as the earliest coal mine in the ancient world and started around 1000 BC. In pre-modern China, coal was constrained both by the limitations of traditional technology and the weakness of demand.[11] In the 3rd century BC, Chinese people began burning coal for heat.[12] The spread of coal use was gradual until the late 11th century when a timber shortage in north China produced a fast-paced expansion in coal mining and consumption.[11] In 1000 AD, Chinese mines were ahead of most mining advancements[clarification needed] in the world.[12]

Coal mines in China faced similar problems to European ones. Both Chinese and European miners preferred to use drift mines sunk horizontally into the hillside for drainage of water. In the 18th century, British observers realized that such mines in Guangdong were opening out directly on to a river. Slope mines were the second most common type, as mines in Leiyang, Hunan.[11]

In the 19th century, shaft mines were predominant, especially in north China. European observers interpreted that as a consequence of the lack of wood in the zone to hold up the roof in slope mines. Flooding was a constant problem, and several mines were abandoned for that reason.[11]

Coal mines in China were as deep as those in Europe. In areas such as Shanxi with natural drainage, mines were as deep as 120 m. From Henan and Manchuria, mines had depths of 90 m or more.[11]

Early coal consumption in China Edit

Coal consumption in traditional China was substantial but low on a per capita basis. Main coal demand came from industry. The earliest references to coal are in the context of smelting methods. The technology was spread from the central plain to outlying areas in China.[11]

In the 11th century, the iron produced in north China was smelted in coke-burning blast-furnaces. Deforestation in that zone forced to turn to the use of coke, mushrooming ironworking centers along the Henan-Hebei border. Accounts of that period estimate that at least 140 000 tons of coal a year were used by the iron industry in that zone. Chinese scientist Song Yingxing suggested that around 70% of iron was smelted with coal. Meanwhile, 30% used charcoal. Shanxi was the center of the iron industry in late traditional times.[timeframe?] German scientist Ferdinand von Richthofen accounted for the use of coal in several areas of the province.[11]

Early descriptions of coal for household purposes go back until the 6th century when a writer pointed out that food tastes different according to whether it was cooked over coal, charcoal, bamboo, or grass. From the 11th century, coal was the main option in the household in the capital at Kaifeng. At the beginning of the 12th century, twenty new coal markets were established and coal replaced charcoal in the zone. Increasing demand led to the development of mining in areas of Henan and Shandong. Marco Polo claimed that coal was "burnt through the province of Cathay" and pointed out that was used in bathhouses.[11]

Production Edit

 
Coal production in China, 1950–2012
 
Production of coal within China by type.
 
For reference: GDP of the PRC. Coal production and usage demonstrates a hypersensitivity to economic changes.

Coalfields Edit

China produces most of the thermal coal (both black and brown coal) it burns, but imports coking coal to make high quality steel.[13] Inner Mongolia, Shanxi and Shaanxi are the main coal-producing provinces,[14] and most coal is found in the north and northwest of the country.[15] This poses a large logistical problem for supplying electricity to the more heavily populated coastal areas in the southeast.[16][17]

Coal production Edit

China is the largest coal producer in the world,[18] with 3.84 billion tonnes in 2020 and China National Coal Association forecasting an increase in 2021.[19] The coal production 1829 Mtoe in 2018 is more than the total aggregate of next nine top coal producers and 46.7% of the total global production.[20]

Coal in China (million tonnes)[21][22][a]
Production Net import Net available
2005 2,226 -47 2,179
2008 2,761 nd 2,761
2009 2,971 114 3,085
2010 3,162 157 3,319
2011 3,576 177 3,753
2012 3,549 278 3,827
2013 3,561 320 3,881
2014 3,640 292 3,932
2015 3,563 204 3,767
2016 3,268 282 3,550
2017 3,397 284 3,681
2018[b] 3,550 295 3,845
  1. ^ excluding Hong Kong
  2. ^ Provisional data

In 2011, seven Chinese coal mining companies produced 100 million tonnes of coal or more. These companies were Shenhua Group, China Coal Group, Shaanxi Coal and Chemical Industry, Shanxi Coking Coal Group, Datong Coal Mine Group, Jizhong Energy, and Shandong Energy.[23] The largest metallurgical coal producer was Shanxi Coking Coal Group.[24]

In 2015, official statistics revealed that previous statistics had been systematically underestimated by 17%, corresponding to the entire CO2 emissions of Germany.[25]

 
A coal mine near Hailar District.

China's largest open-pit coal mine is located in Haerwusu in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. It started production in 2008, and is operated by Shenhua Group. Its estimated coal output was forecast at 7 million tonnes in the fourth quarter of 2008. With a designed annual capacity of 20 million tonnes of crude coal, it will operate for approximately 79 years. Its coal reserves total about 1.73 billion tonnes. It is rich in low-sulfur steam coal.[26] Mines in Inner Mongolia are rapidly expanding production, with 637 million tons produced in 2009. Transport of coal from this region to seaports on China's coast has overloaded highways such as China National Highway 110 resulting in chronic traffic jams and delays.[27]

In 2021, the government ordered all coal mines to operate at full capacity at all times, including holidays; approved new mines, and reduced restrictions on coal mining.[28]

Imports Edit

China is the world's largest importer of coal: with big imports from Russia and Indonesia in the 2020s.[29][30] After boycotting Australian coal in 2020, coking coal imports from Mongolia[31] and the US increased.[29]

Use Edit

57% of energy consumption was from coal in 2020, and 49% for coal-fired power.[32] The coal consumption was 1907 Mtoe in 2018 which is 50.2% of the global consumption.[20] The National Development and Reform Commission, which determines the energy policy of China, aims to keep China's coal consumption below 3.8 billion tonnes per annum.[citation needed]

The consumption of coal is largely in power production, aside from this, there is a lot of industry and manufacturing use along with a comparatively very small amount of domestic use in poorer households for heating and cooking.[30]

IEA Breakdown of coal consumption (million short tons), 2007[33]
Use Anthracite Coking Coal Other Bituminous
Residential 0 0 71.7
Industry 24.6 16.3 342.1
Electricity Plants 0 0.2 1305.2
Heat Plants 0 0.19 153.7
Other Transformation[34] 0 359.2 84.0

Electricity generation Edit

Coal power is distributed by the State Power Grid Corporation.

China's installed coal-based electrical capacity was 1080 GW in 2021,[35] about half the total installed capacity.[36] Coal generated 57% of electricity in 2020.[37] Over half the world's coal-fired power is generated in China.[38] 5 GW of new coal power was approved in the first half of 2021.[36] Quotas force utility companies to buy coal power over cheaper renewable power.[39] Carbon Tracker estimated in 2020 that the average coal fleet loss was about 4 USD/MWh and that about 60% of power stations were cashflow negative in 2018 and 2019.[40] According to 2020 analysis by Energy Foundation China, to keep warming to 1.5 degrees C all China's coal plants without carbon capture must be phased out by 2045.[41]

Industrial use Edit

One of the principal users is the steel industry in China, which burns metallurgical coal.[42]

Domestic use Edit

 
Coal for domestic use (honeycomb briquettes) being transported by use of a tricycle, 1997.

In cities the domestic burning of coal is no longer permitted. In rural areas coal is still permitted to be used by Chinese households, commonly burned raw in unvented stoves. This fills houses with high levels of toxic metals leading to bad indoor air quality (IAQ). In addition, people eat food cooked over coal fires that contains toxic substances. Toxic substances from coal burning include arsenic, fluorine, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and mercury. These cause health issues such as severe arsenic poisoning, skeletal fluorosis (over 10 million people afflicted in China), esophageal and lung cancers, and selenium poisoning.[43]

China is now aware of the impact of coal on the environment and is taking steps to change it. Currently, China has started to implement natural gas as an alternative to coal for heating. But if rural areas lose government subsidies, no one will continue to use natural gas. [44]

In 2007 the use of coal and biomass (collectively referred to as solid fuels) for domestic purposes was nearly ubiquitous in rural households but declining in urban homes. At that time, estimates put the number of premature deaths due to indoor air pollution at 420,000 per year, which is even higher than due to outdoor air pollution, estimated at around 300,000 deaths per year. The specific mechanisms for death cited have been respiratory illnesses, lung cancer, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), weakening of the immune system, and reduction in lung function. Measured pollution levels in homes using solid fuels generally exceeded China's IAQ air quality standards. Technologies exist to improve indoor air quality, notably the installation of a chimney and modernized bioenergy but need more support to make a larger difference.[45]


Carbon footprint Edit

 
Most CO2 is from coal

2019 carbon emissions from coal in China are estimated at 7.24 billion tonnes CO2 emissions,[46] around 14% of the world total greenhouse gas emissions of around 50 billion tonnes.[47] In 2021 the carbon price was about one-tenth of the EU carbon price.[39]

It is believed that a continued increase in coal power in China may undermine international initiatives to decrease carbon emissions, such as the Paris Agreement.[48]

Efforts to reduce emissions Edit

Air pollution in China kills 750,000 people every year, according to a study by the World Bank.[49] Issued in response to record-high levels of air pollution in 2012 and 2013, the State Council's September 2013 Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Air Pollution reiterated the need to reduce coal's share in China's energy mix to 65% by 2017.[50] Amidst growing public concern, social unrest incidents are growing around the country. For example, in December 2011 the government suspended plans to expand a coal-fired power plant in the city of Haimen after 30,000 local residents staged a violent protest against it, because "the coal-fired power plant was behind a rise in the number of local cancer patients, environmental pollution and a drop in the local fishermen's catch."[51]

In addition to environmental and health costs at home, China's dependence on coal is cause for concern on a global scale. Due in large part to the emissions caused by burning coal, China is now the number one producer of carbon dioxide, responsible for a full quarter of the world's CO2 output.[52] The country has taken steps towards battling climate change by pledging to cut its carbon intensity (the amount of CO2 produced per dollar of economic output) by about 40 percent by 2020, compared to 2005 levels.[52]

China has said carbon dioxide from coal will peak by 2025.[53] On average, China's coal plants work more efficiently than those in the United States, due to their relative youth.[54]

In September 2011, the Chinese government's Ministry of Environmental Protection announced a new emission standard for thermal power plants, for NOx and mercury, and a tightening of SO2 and soot standards. New coal power plants have a set date of the beginning of 2012 and for old power plants by mid-2014. They must also abide by a new limit on mercury by beginning of 2015. It is estimated such measures could bring about a 70% reduction in NOx emissions from power plants.[55]

The Chinese national carbon trading scheme began in 2021.

Beijing Edit

China decided to close the last four coal-fired power and heating plants out of Beijing's municipal area, replacing them with gas-fired power plants, in an effort to improve air quality in the capital. The four plants, owned by Huaneng Power International, Datang International Power Generation Co Ltd, China Shenhua Energy and Beijing Jingneng Thermal Power Co Ltd, had a total power generating capacity of about 2.7 gigawatts (GW).[56] All of them have been closed as of March 2019.[citation needed]

Coal mine fires Edit

It is estimated that coal mine fires in China burn about 200 million kg of coal each year. Small illegal fires are frequent in the northern region of Shanxi. Local miners may use abandoned mines for shelter and intentionally set such fires. One study estimates that this translates into 360 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year, which is not included in the previous emissions figures.[57]

North China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region has announced plans to extinguish fires in the region by 2012. Most of these fires were caused by bad mining practices combined with bad weather. 200 million yuan (29.3 million USD) has been budgeted to this effect.[58]

Accidents and deaths Edit

In 2003, the death rate per million tons of coal mined in China was 130 times higher than in the United States, 250 times higher than in Australia (open cast mines) and 10 times higher than the Russian Federation (underground mines). However the safety figures in the major state owned coal enterprises were significantly better. Even so, in 2007 China produced one third of the world's coal but had four fifths of coal fatalities.[59] China's coal mining industry resorts to forced labor according to a 2014 U.S. Department of Labor report on child labor and forced labor around the world,[60] and that these workers are all the more exposed to the dangers of such activities.

Pulmonary disease Edit

 
Disability-adjusted life year for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease per 100,000 inhabitants in 2004.[61]
  no data
  less than 110
  110–220
  220–330
  330–440
  440–550
  550–660
  660–770
  770–880
  880–990
  990–1100
  1100–1350
  more than 1350

While not directly attributable, many more deaths are resultant from dangerous emissions from coal plants. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), linked to exposure to fine particulates, SO2, and cigarette smoke among other factors, accounted for 26% of all deaths in China in 1988.[62] A report by the World Bank in cooperation with the Chinese government found that about 750,000 people die prematurely in China each year from air pollution. Later, the government asked the researchers to soften the conclusions.[63]

Many direct deaths happen in coal mining and processing. In 2007, 1,084 out of the 3,770 workers who died were from gas blasts. Small mines (comprising 90% of all mines) are known to have far higher death rates, and the government of China has banned new coal mines with a high gas danger and a capacity below 300,000 tons in an effort to reduce deaths a further 20% by 2010. The government has also vowed to close 4,000 small mines to improve industry safety.[64]

Accidents Edit

As of 2009, the government has been cracking down on unregulated mining operations, which in 2009 accounted for nearly 80 percent of the country's 16,000 mines. The closure of about 1,000 dangerous small mines in 2008 helped to cut in half the average number of miners killed, to about six a day, in the first six months of 2009, according to the government. Major gas explosions in coal mines remain a problem, though the number of accidents and deaths have gradually declined year by year, the chief of the State Administration of Work Safety, Luo Lin, told a national conference in September 2009.[65]

In the first nine months of 2009, China's coal mines had eleven major accidents with 303 deaths, with gas explosions the leading cause, according to the central government. Most accidents are blamed on failures to follow safety rules, including a lack of required ventilation or fire control equipment.[65]

Unofficial estimates often estimate death tolls at twice the official number reported by the government.[66][unreliable source?] Since 1949 over 250,000 coal mining deaths have been recorded[when?].[67] However, since 2002, the death toll is gradually declining while the coal production is rapidly rising, doubling over this same period[when?].

By year Edit

 
A Chinese coal miner at the Jin Hua Gong Mine
Year Number of accidents Deaths Death rate per
million tons of coal
2000 2,863 5,798 5.80
2001 3,082 5,670 5.11
2002 4,344 6,995 4.93
2003 4,143 6,434 4.00
2004 3,639 6,027 3.01
2005 3,341 5,986 2.73
2006 2,945 4,746 1.99
2007 3,770 1.44
2008 3,210 1.18
2009 1,616 2,631 0.89
2010 2,433[68]
2011 1,973[69]
2012 1,301
2013 1,049

Source: State Administration of Work Safety[70]

Technology export Edit

As of 2018 China is exporting technology, for example for coal mining in Turkey.[71]

Just transition to phase out coal Edit

 
The annual amount of coal plant capacity being retired increased into the mid-2010s.[72] However, the rate of retirement has since stalled,[72] and global coal phase-out is not yet compatible with the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement.[73]
 
In parallel with retirement of some coal plant capacity, other coal plants are still being added, though the annual amount of added capacity has been declining since the 2010s.[74]

According to BloombergNEF excluding subsidies the levelized cost of electricity from new large-scale solar power has been below existing coal-fired power stations since 2021.[75] Coal production employed 2.6 million in 2020 so a just transition is important, but renewable energy creates more jobs per yuan invested.[76] Almost half of tax revenue in Shanxi province is from coal.[76] Energy storage and demand response are important for replacing coal generation.[77] In 2020 a group of experts said that China should stop subsidizing coal.[78]

International opinions Edit

In 2020 UN secretary general António Guterres said that China should stop building coal-fired power stations,[79] and such building was criticized by US climate envoy John Kerry in 2021 as making it difficult to limit climate change.[80]

See also Edit

Other countries

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  75. ^ Runyon, Jennifer (23 June 2021). "Report: New solar is cheaper to build than to run existing coal plants in China, India and most of Europe". Renewable Energy World.
  76. ^ a b "CHINA'S CARBON NEUTRAL OPPORTUNITY" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 28 February 2021.
  77. ^ Kahrl, Fredrich; Lin, Jiang; Liu, Xu; Hu, Junfeng (24 September 2021). "Sunsetting coal power in China". iScience. 24 (9): 102939. Bibcode:2021iSci...24j2939K. doi:10.1016/j.isci.2021.102939. ISSN 2589-0042. PMC 8379489. PMID 34458696.
  78. ^ "India and China Can Quit Coal Earlier, But the World Must Work Alongside Them". thediplomat.com. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  79. ^ "Coal should play no part in post-coronavirus recoveries, U.N. chief says". Reuters. 24 July 2020. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  80. ^ "Kerry: China's Coal Binge Could 'Undo' Global Capacity to Meet Climate Targets | Voice of America – English". www.voanews.com. 2 September 2021. Retrieved 11 September 2021.

Further reading Edit

  • Ren, Mengjia; Branstetter, Lee G.; Kovak, Brian K.; Armanios, Daniel E.; Yuan, Jiahai (January 2019). "Why Has China Overinvested in Coal Power?". NBER Paper. Working Paper Series. National Bureau of Economic Research (25437). doi:10.3386/w25437. S2CID 169618063.
  • Thomson, Elspeth (2003). The Chinese Coal Industry: An Economic History. Routledge.
  • Wu, Shellen Xiao (2015). Empires of Coal: Fueling China's Entry into the Modern World Order, 1860-1920. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. pp. 266 pp. ISBN 978-0-8047-9284-4.
  • Boom and Bust 2021: Tracking The Global Coal Plant Pipeline (Report). Global Energy Monitor. 5 April 2021.

External links Edit

Organizations
  • Institute of Coal Chemistry

coal, china, china, largest, producer, consumer, coal, largest, user, coal, generated, electricity, world, share, coal, chinese, energy, declined, 2021, according, energy, information, agency, coal, supplies, most, china, energyentrance, small, coal, mine, chi. China is the largest producer and consumer of coal and the largest user of coal generated electricity in the world The share of coal in the Chinese energy mix declined to 55 in 2021 according to the US Energy Information Agency 1 Coal supplies most of China s energyEntrance to a small coal mine in China 1999A coal shipment underway in China 2007An operating power plant in China 2005Historical coal production of different countriesThe Chinese central government has clamped down on the pace of new construction of coal plants and shifted to renewable nuclear and natural gas sources 2 At the same time coal consumption reached new heights in China with carbon dioxide emissions from coal fired electricity production estimated to top 4 5 billion tonnes in 2022 Reuters noted in 2022 China is set to delight and depress climate trackers in equal measure in 2022 by setting new global records in both clean power utilisation and coal fired electricity emissions Solar and wind generated electricity surged by over 30 and 25 respectively during the period from January to October 2022 compared to the same period in 2021 3 Despite central government attempts to clamp down on construction and shifting demand in the market to renewable nuclear and natural gas sources 2 43 coal power units were announced in the first half of 2021 according to the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air in August 2021 4 In September 2021 China pledged to end financing of coal power plants abroad 5 A study by Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air in April 2022 stated at least 15 overseas coal power plants had been cancelled since the announcement while 18 projects which had secured financing and necessary permits could enter into construction 6 During the 2021 energy crisis in China this dependency on coal units depletion of reserves increasing import prices and slowdowns of shipment and production lead to widespread shutdowns of industrial energy use 7 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Coal mines in pre industrial China 1 2 Early coal consumption in China 2 Production 2 1 Coalfields 2 2 Coal production 3 Imports 4 Use 4 1 Electricity generation 4 2 Industrial use 4 3 Domestic use 5 Carbon footprint 5 1 Efforts to reduce emissions 5 2 Beijing 5 3 Coal mine fires 6 Accidents and deaths 6 1 Pulmonary disease 6 2 Accidents 6 3 By year 7 Technology export 8 Just transition to phase out coal 9 International opinions 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Site of the former Ministry of Coal Industry in Hepingli Beijing the ministry was abolished in 1998Coal mines in pre industrial China Edit Ancient people in current China started using coal around 6 000 years ago 9 Historians suspects that the Chinese were involved in the surface mining of coal around 3490 BC pioneering the pre modern world 10 Fushan mine uses clarification needed to be pointed out as the earliest coal mine in the ancient world and started around 1000 BC In pre modern China coal was constrained both by the limitations of traditional technology and the weakness of demand 11 In the 3rd century BC Chinese people began burning coal for heat 12 The spread of coal use was gradual until the late 11th century when a timber shortage in north China produced a fast paced expansion in coal mining and consumption 11 In 1000 AD Chinese mines were ahead of most mining advancements clarification needed in the world 12 Coal mines in China faced similar problems to European ones Both Chinese and European miners preferred to use drift mines sunk horizontally into the hillside for drainage of water In the 18th century British observers realized that such mines in Guangdong were opening out directly on to a river Slope mines were the second most common type as mines in Leiyang Hunan 11 In the 19th century shaft mines were predominant especially in north China European observers interpreted that as a consequence of the lack of wood in the zone to hold up the roof in slope mines Flooding was a constant problem and several mines were abandoned for that reason 11 Coal mines in China were as deep as those in Europe In areas such as Shanxi with natural drainage mines were as deep as 120 m From Henan and Manchuria mines had depths of 90 m or more 11 Early coal consumption in China Edit Coal consumption in traditional China was substantial but low on a per capita basis Main coal demand came from industry The earliest references to coal are in the context of smelting methods The technology was spread from the central plain to outlying areas in China 11 In the 11th century the iron produced in north China was smelted in coke burning blast furnaces Deforestation in that zone forced to turn to the use of coke mushrooming ironworking centers along the Henan Hebei border Accounts of that period estimate that at least 140 000 tons of coal a year were used by the iron industry in that zone Chinese scientist Song Yingxing suggested that around 70 of iron was smelted with coal Meanwhile 30 used charcoal Shanxi was the center of the iron industry in late traditional times timeframe German scientist Ferdinand von Richthofen accounted for the use of coal in several areas of the province 11 Early descriptions of coal for household purposes go back until the 6th century when a writer pointed out that food tastes different according to whether it was cooked over coal charcoal bamboo or grass From the 11th century coal was the main option in the household in the capital at Kaifeng At the beginning of the 12th century twenty new coal markets were established and coal replaced charcoal in the zone Increasing demand led to the development of mining in areas of Henan and Shandong Marco Polo claimed that coal was burnt through the province of Cathay and pointed out that was used in bathhouses 11 Production Edit nbsp Coal production in China 1950 2012 nbsp Production of coal within China by type nbsp For reference GDP of the PRC Coal production and usage demonstrates a hypersensitivity to economic changes Coalfields Edit China produces most of the thermal coal both black and brown coal it burns but imports coking coal to make high quality steel 13 Inner Mongolia Shanxi and Shaanxi are the main coal producing provinces 14 and most coal is found in the north and northwest of the country 15 This poses a large logistical problem for supplying electricity to the more heavily populated coastal areas in the southeast 16 17 Coal production Edit China is the largest coal producer in the world 18 with 3 84 billion tonnes in 2020 and China National Coal Association forecasting an increase in 2021 19 The coal production 1829 Mtoe in 2018 is more than the total aggregate of next nine top coal producers and 46 7 of the total global production 20 Coal in China million tonnes 21 22 a Production Net import Net available2005 2 226 47 2 1792008 2 761 nd 2 7612009 2 971 114 3 0852010 3 162 157 3 3192011 3 576 177 3 7532012 3 549 278 3 8272013 3 561 320 3 8812014 3 640 292 3 9322015 3 563 204 3 7672016 3 268 282 3 5502017 3 397 284 3 6812018 b 3 550 295 3 845 excluding Hong Kong Provisional dataIn 2011 seven Chinese coal mining companies produced 100 million tonnes of coal or more These companies were Shenhua Group China Coal Group Shaanxi Coal and Chemical Industry Shanxi Coking Coal Group Datong Coal Mine Group Jizhong Energy and Shandong Energy 23 The largest metallurgical coal producer was Shanxi Coking Coal Group 24 In 2015 official statistics revealed that previous statistics had been systematically underestimated by 17 corresponding to the entire CO2 emissions of Germany 25 nbsp A coal mine near Hailar District China s largest open pit coal mine is located in Haerwusu in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region It started production in 2008 and is operated by Shenhua Group Its estimated coal output was forecast at 7 million tonnes in the fourth quarter of 2008 With a designed annual capacity of 20 million tonnes of crude coal it will operate for approximately 79 years Its coal reserves total about 1 73 billion tonnes It is rich in low sulfur steam coal 26 Mines in Inner Mongolia are rapidly expanding production with 637 million tons produced in 2009 Transport of coal from this region to seaports on China s coast has overloaded highways such as China National Highway 110 resulting in chronic traffic jams and delays 27 In 2021 the government ordered all coal mines to operate at full capacity at all times including holidays approved new mines and reduced restrictions on coal mining 28 Imports EditChina is the world s largest importer of coal with big imports from Russia and Indonesia in the 2020s 29 30 After boycotting Australian coal in 2020 coking coal imports from Mongolia 31 and the US increased 29 Use Edit57 of energy consumption was from coal in 2020 and 49 for coal fired power 32 The coal consumption was 1907 Mtoe in 2018 which is 50 2 of the global consumption 20 The National Development and Reform Commission which determines the energy policy of China aims to keep China s coal consumption below 3 8 billion tonnes per annum citation needed The consumption of coal is largely in power production aside from this there is a lot of industry and manufacturing use along with a comparatively very small amount of domestic use in poorer households for heating and cooking 30 IEA Breakdown of coal consumption million short tons 2007 33 Use Anthracite Coking Coal Other BituminousResidential 0 0 71 7Industry 24 6 16 3 342 1Electricity Plants 0 0 2 1305 2Heat Plants 0 0 19 153 7Other Transformation 34 0 359 2 84 0Electricity generation Edit Main article Electricity sector in China Coal power is distributed by the State Power Grid Corporation China s installed coal based electrical capacity was 1080 GW in 2021 35 about half the total installed capacity 36 Coal generated 57 of electricity in 2020 37 Over half the world s coal fired power is generated in China 38 5 GW of new coal power was approved in the first half of 2021 36 Quotas force utility companies to buy coal power over cheaper renewable power 39 Carbon Tracker estimated in 2020 that the average coal fleet loss was about 4 USD MWh and that about 60 of power stations were cashflow negative in 2018 and 2019 40 According to 2020 analysis by Energy Foundation China to keep warming to 1 5 degrees C all China s coal plants without carbon capture must be phased out by 2045 41 Industrial use Edit One of the principal users is the steel industry in China which burns metallurgical coal 42 Domestic use Edit nbsp Coal for domestic use honeycomb briquettes being transported by use of a tricycle 1997 In cities the domestic burning of coal is no longer permitted In rural areas coal is still permitted to be used by Chinese households commonly burned raw in unvented stoves This fills houses with high levels of toxic metals leading to bad indoor air quality IAQ In addition people eat food cooked over coal fires that contains toxic substances Toxic substances from coal burning include arsenic fluorine polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and mercury These cause health issues such as severe arsenic poisoning skeletal fluorosis over 10 million people afflicted in China esophageal and lung cancers and selenium poisoning 43 China is now aware of the impact of coal on the environment and is taking steps to change it Currently China has started to implement natural gas as an alternative to coal for heating But if rural areas lose government subsidies no one will continue to use natural gas 44 In 2007 the use of coal and biomass collectively referred to as solid fuels for domestic purposes was nearly ubiquitous in rural households but declining in urban homes At that time estimates put the number of premature deaths due to indoor air pollution at 420 000 per year which is even higher than due to outdoor air pollution estimated at around 300 000 deaths per year The specific mechanisms for death cited have been respiratory illnesses lung cancer Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease COPD weakening of the immune system and reduction in lung function Measured pollution levels in homes using solid fuels generally exceeded China s IAQ air quality standards Technologies exist to improve indoor air quality notably the installation of a chimney and modernized bioenergy but need more support to make a larger difference 45 Carbon footprint Edit nbsp Most CO2 is from coal2019 carbon emissions from coal in China are estimated at 7 24 billion tonnes CO2 emissions 46 around 14 of the world total greenhouse gas emissions of around 50 billion tonnes 47 In 2021 the carbon price was about one tenth of the EU carbon price 39 It is believed that a continued increase in coal power in China may undermine international initiatives to decrease carbon emissions such as the Paris Agreement 48 Efforts to reduce emissions Edit Air pollution in China kills 750 000 people every year according to a study by the World Bank 49 Issued in response to record high levels of air pollution in 2012 and 2013 the State Council s September 2013 Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Air Pollution reiterated the need to reduce coal s share in China s energy mix to 65 by 2017 50 Amidst growing public concern social unrest incidents are growing around the country For example in December 2011 the government suspended plans to expand a coal fired power plant in the city of Haimen after 30 000 local residents staged a violent protest against it because the coal fired power plant was behind a rise in the number of local cancer patients environmental pollution and a drop in the local fishermen s catch 51 In addition to environmental and health costs at home China s dependence on coal is cause for concern on a global scale Due in large part to the emissions caused by burning coal China is now the number one producer of carbon dioxide responsible for a full quarter of the world s CO2 output 52 The country has taken steps towards battling climate change by pledging to cut its carbon intensity the amount of CO2 produced per dollar of economic output by about 40 percent by 2020 compared to 2005 levels 52 China has said carbon dioxide from coal will peak by 2025 53 On average China s coal plants work more efficiently than those in the United States due to their relative youth 54 In September 2011 the Chinese government s Ministry of Environmental Protection announced a new emission standard for thermal power plants for NOx and mercury and a tightening of SO2 and soot standards New coal power plants have a set date of the beginning of 2012 and for old power plants by mid 2014 They must also abide by a new limit on mercury by beginning of 2015 It is estimated such measures could bring about a 70 reduction in NOx emissions from power plants 55 The Chinese national carbon trading scheme began in 2021 Beijing Edit China decided to close the last four coal fired power and heating plants out of Beijing s municipal area replacing them with gas fired power plants in an effort to improve air quality in the capital The four plants owned by Huaneng Power International Datang International Power Generation Co Ltd China Shenhua Energy and Beijing Jingneng Thermal Power Co Ltd had a total power generating capacity of about 2 7 gigawatts GW 56 All of them have been closed as of March 2019 citation needed Coal mine fires Edit It is estimated that coal mine fires in China burn about 200 million kg of coal each year Small illegal fires are frequent in the northern region of Shanxi Local miners may use abandoned mines for shelter and intentionally set such fires One study estimates that this translates into 360 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year which is not included in the previous emissions figures 57 North China s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region has announced plans to extinguish fires in the region by 2012 Most of these fires were caused by bad mining practices combined with bad weather 200 million yuan 29 3 million USD has been budgeted to this effect 58 Accidents and deaths EditMain article List of coal mining accidents in China In 2003 the death rate per million tons of coal mined in China was 130 times higher than in the United States 250 times higher than in Australia open cast mines and 10 times higher than the Russian Federation underground mines However the safety figures in the major state owned coal enterprises were significantly better Even so in 2007 China produced one third of the world s coal but had four fifths of coal fatalities 59 China s coal mining industry resorts to forced labor according to a 2014 U S Department of Labor report on child labor and forced labor around the world 60 and that these workers are all the more exposed to the dangers of such activities Pulmonary disease Edit nbsp Disability adjusted life year for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease per 100 000 inhabitants in 2004 61 no data less than 110 110 220 220 330 330 440 440 550 550 660 660 770 770 880 880 990 990 1100 1100 1350 more than 1350While not directly attributable many more deaths are resultant from dangerous emissions from coal plants Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease COPD linked to exposure to fine particulates SO2 and cigarette smoke among other factors accounted for 26 of all deaths in China in 1988 62 A report by the World Bank in cooperation with the Chinese government found that about 750 000 people die prematurely in China each year from air pollution Later the government asked the researchers to soften the conclusions 63 Many direct deaths happen in coal mining and processing In 2007 1 084 out of the 3 770 workers who died were from gas blasts Small mines comprising 90 of all mines are known to have far higher death rates and the government of China has banned new coal mines with a high gas danger and a capacity below 300 000 tons in an effort to reduce deaths a further 20 by 2010 The government has also vowed to close 4 000 small mines to improve industry safety 64 Accidents Edit As of 2009 the government has been cracking down on unregulated mining operations which in 2009 accounted for nearly 80 percent of the country s 16 000 mines The closure of about 1 000 dangerous small mines in 2008 helped to cut in half the average number of miners killed to about six a day in the first six months of 2009 according to the government Major gas explosions in coal mines remain a problem though the number of accidents and deaths have gradually declined year by year the chief of the State Administration of Work Safety Luo Lin told a national conference in September 2009 65 In the first nine months of 2009 China s coal mines had eleven major accidents with 303 deaths with gas explosions the leading cause according to the central government Most accidents are blamed on failures to follow safety rules including a lack of required ventilation or fire control equipment 65 Unofficial estimates often estimate death tolls at twice the official number reported by the government 66 unreliable source Since 1949 over 250 000 coal mining deaths have been recorded when 67 However since 2002 the death toll is gradually declining while the coal production is rapidly rising doubling over this same period when By year Edit nbsp A Chinese coal miner at the Jin Hua Gong MineYear Number of accidents Deaths Death rate per million tons of coal2000 2 863 5 798 5 802001 3 082 5 670 5 112002 4 344 6 995 4 932003 4 143 6 434 4 002004 3 639 6 027 3 012005 3 341 5 986 2 732006 2 945 4 746 1 992007 3 770 1 442008 3 210 1 182009 1 616 2 631 0 892010 2 433 68 2011 1 973 69 2012 1 3012013 1 049Source State Administration of Work Safety 70 Technology export EditAs of 2018 update China is exporting technology for example for coal mining in Turkey 71 Just transition to phase out coal EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 nbsp The annual amount of coal plant capacity being retired increased into the mid 2010s 72 However the rate of retirement has since stalled 72 and global coal phase out is not yet compatible with the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement 73 nbsp In parallel with retirement of some coal plant capacity other coal plants are still being added though the annual amount of added capacity has been declining since the 2010s 74 According to BloombergNEF excluding subsidies the levelized cost of electricity from new large scale solar power has been below existing coal fired power stations since 2021 75 Coal production employed 2 6 million in 2020 so a just transition is important but renewable energy creates more jobs per yuan invested 76 Almost half of tax revenue in Shanxi province is from coal 76 Energy storage and demand response are important for replacing coal generation 77 In 2020 a group of experts said that China should stop subsidizing coal 78 International opinions EditSee also Debate over China s economic responsibilities for climate change mitigation In 2020 UN secretary general Antonio Guterres said that China should stop building coal fired power stations 79 and such building was criticized by US climate envoy John Kerry in 2021 as making it difficult to limit climate change 80 See also Edit nbsp China portal nbsp Energy portalCategory Coal companies of China Asian brown cloud Clean coal technologyOther countriesCoal mining in Canada Coal in the United StatesReferences Edit International U S Energy Information Administration EIA US Energy Information Agency a b A glut of new coal fired power stations endangers China s green ambitions Economist 21 May 2020 Maguire Gavin 23 November 2022 China on track to hit new clean amp dirty power records in 2022 Reuters China s power amp steel firms continue to invest in coal even as emissions surge cools down PDF Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air Archived PDF from the original on 20 August 2021 China s Xi Jinping promises to halt new coal projects abroad amid climate crisis cnn Retrieved 3 October 2021 At Least 15 China Backed Coal Plants Canceled Another 37 GW in Limbo Power 24 April 2022 How bad is China s energy crisis the Guardian 29 September 2021 Retrieved 3 October 2021 Seidel Jamie 1 October 2021 China s growing electricity crisis news com au Retrieved 3 October 2021 Ancient China Alberta Culture and Tourims Retrieved 13 December 2020 Cartwright Megan A Brief History of Coal WorldWide RS Retrieved 13 December 2020 a b c d e f g h Wright Tim 1984 Coal Mining in China s Economy and Society 1895 1937 Great Britain Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521258782 a b Unearthing Ancient Mysteries Alberta Culture and Tourims Retrieved 13 December 2020 Why is coal so important to China s economy South China Morning Post 13 February 2021 Retrieved 12 September 2021 Turland Jesse 29 September 2021 Coal Shortages Force Blackouts Across China The Diplomat Retrieved 11 October 2021 Which countries have the highest coal reserves in the world www mining technology com 6 January 2020 Retrieved 12 September 2021 Nuclear Power in China Country Profiles World Nuclear Association 2021 Retrieved 11 October 2021 While coal is the main energy source most reserves are in the north or northwest and present an enormous logistical problem nearly half the country s rail capacity is used in transporting coal Kemp John 28 September 2021 China coal production transportation and consumption PDF Energy Thomson Reuters p 2 Retrieved 11 October 2021 Coal accounts for gt 40 of all freight tonne kms on the rail network Country analysis briefs China Energy Information Administration August 2006 Archived from the original on 21 August 2011 Retrieved 2 July 2008 China s coal consumption seen rising in 2021 imports steady Reuters 3 March 2021 Retrieved 12 September 2021 a b BP Statistical Review 2019 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 26 December 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2020 IEA Key World Energy Statistics 2018 2017 at the Wayback Machine archived 2017 10 02 2014 at the Wayback Machine 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News Agency 19 October 2008 Archived from the original on 23 October 2008 Retrieved 4 August 2010 China s Growth Leads to Problems Down the Road Archived 2017 03 18 at the Wayback Machine Mongolian coal production has exploded up 37 percent to 637 million tons last year alone with an additional 15 percent increase expected this year article by Michael Wines in The New York Times August 27 2010 accessed August 28 2010 Chuin Wei Yap 20 October 2021 China Takes the Brakes Off Coal Production to Tackle Power Shortage The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 17 November 2021 China has ordered all coal mines to operate at full capacity It has ordered all coal mines to operate at full capacity even during holidays issued approvals for new mines China s rollback of restrictions on mining and imports of coal a b Hui Mary 26 August 2021 China s boycott of Australia has redirected global flows of coal Quartz Retrieved 8 September 2021 a b China Wants To Go Carbon Neutral And Won t Stop Burning Coal To Get There NPR org Retrieved 12 September 2021 China eyes more coal imports from Mongolia as supply shortage bites The Star Retrieved 11 September 2021 Zhou Analysts Oceana Liang Analyst Cindy 26 April 2021 China set to cap coal consumption boost domestic oil amp gas output in 2021 www spglobal com Retrieved 11 September 2021 Coal and Peat in China People s Republic of in 2007 International Energy Agency IEA Archived from the original on 14 September 2013 Retrieved 4 August 2010 Other Transformation refers to an energy transformation process not in the preceding list of electricity industry or heat For the case of coal this is likely to include losses own use gains or liquefaction Reference 1 Archived 2011 07 26 at the Wayback Machine Chinese coal plant approvals slum after Xi climate pledge South China Morning Post 25 August 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2021 a b Yihe 58af0734c2bad Xu 1 September 2021 China curbs coal fired power expansion giving way to renewables Upstream Online Upstream Online Latest oil and gas news Retrieved 6 September 2021 Cheng Evelyn 29 April 2021 China has no other choice but to rely on coal power for now official says CNBC Retrieved 6 September 2021 Welle www dw com Deutsche China generated half of global coal power in 2020 study DW 29 03 2021 DW COM Retrieved 6 September 2021 a b Why China is struggling to wean itself from coal Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide www hellenicshippingnews com Retrieved 6 September 2021 Gray Matt Sundaresan Sriya April 2020 Political decisions economic realities The underlying operating cashflows of coal power during COVID 19 Report Carbon Tracker p 19 China s New Growth Pathway From the 14th Five Year Plan to Carbon Neutrality PDF Report Energy Foundation China December 2020 p 24 Staff 2 September 2021 China puts price controls on domestic metallurgical coal sources www spglobal com Retrieved 11 September 2021 Robert B Finkelman Harvey E Belkin and Baoshan Zheng Health impacts of domestic coal use in China 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version of the report 2 Archived 2008 09 04 at the Wayback Machine Xinhua China to ban small coal mines for improving pit safety record Archived 2008 10 21 at the Wayback Machine August 15 2008 a b 42 Reported Dead and 66 Trapped in China Mine Accident Archived 2017 03 17 at the Wayback Machine by the Associated Press via The New York Times November 21 2009 Retrieved 2009 11 21 World Socialist Website China s coal mining deaths spiral Archived 2008 02 05 at the Wayback Machine August 3 2002 International Herald Tribune Chinese coal industry in need of a helping hand Archived 2014 08 11 at the Wayback Machine China s coalmine death toll drops 7 5 in 2010 Archived from the original on 22 February 2017 Retrieved 14 January 2013 20 Die in Coal Mine Plunge China Digital Times CDT 25 September 2012 Archived from the original on 15 January 2013 Retrieved 13 October 2017 Mines and Communities Website China and US coal disasters Archived 2014 05 17 at the Wayback Machine 7th January 2006 TURKEY MINING 2018 PDF Global Business Reports p 35 Archived PDF from the original on 17 May 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2019 a b Retired Coal fired Power Capacity by Country Global Coal Plant Tracker Global Energy Monitor 2023 Archived from the original on 9 April 2023 Global Energy Monitor s Summary of Tables archive Shared attribution Global Energy Monitor CREA E3G Reclaim Finance Sierra Club SFOC Kiko Network CAN Europe Bangladesh Groups ACJCE Chile Sustentable 5 April 2023 Boom and Bust Coal Tracking the Global Coal Plant Pipeline PDF Global Energy Monitor p 3 Archived PDF from the original on 7 April 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link New Coal fired Power Capacity by Country Global Coal Plant Tracker Global Energy Monitor 2023 Archived from the original on 19 March 2023 Global Energy Monitor s Summary of Tables archive Runyon Jennifer 23 June 2021 Report New solar is cheaper to build than to run existing coal plants in China India and most of Europe Renewable Energy World a b CHINA S CARBON NEUTRAL OPPORTUNITY PDF Archived PDF from the original on 28 February 2021 Kahrl Fredrich Lin Jiang Liu Xu Hu Junfeng 24 September 2021 Sunsetting coal power in China iScience 24 9 102939 Bibcode 2021iSci 24j2939K doi 10 1016 j isci 2021 102939 ISSN 2589 0042 PMC 8379489 PMID 34458696 India and China Can Quit Coal Earlier But the World Must Work Alongside Them thediplomat com Retrieved 30 December 2021 Coal should play no part in post coronavirus recoveries U N chief says Reuters 24 July 2020 Retrieved 28 August 2020 Kerry China s Coal Binge Could Undo Global Capacity to Meet Climate Targets Voice of America English www voanews com 2 September 2021 Retrieved 11 September 2021 Further reading EditRen Mengjia Branstetter Lee G Kovak Brian K Armanios Daniel E Yuan Jiahai January 2019 Why Has China Overinvested in Coal Power NBER Paper Working Paper Series National Bureau of Economic Research 25437 doi 10 3386 w25437 S2CID 169618063 Thomson Elspeth 2003 The Chinese Coal Industry An Economic History Routledge Wu Shellen Xiao 2015 Empires of Coal Fueling China s Entry into the Modern World Order 1860 1920 Stanford California Stanford University Press pp 266 pp ISBN 978 0 8047 9284 4 Boom and Bust 2021 Tracking The Global Coal Plant Pipeline Report Global Energy Monitor 5 April 2021 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coal in China nbsp Wikinews has related news 170 workers trapped in Chinese mine after explosion OrganizationsInstitute of Coal Chemistry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coal in China amp oldid 1177392432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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