- ID: 8281335
- Dateline: Recent
- Location: Various,China;
- Duration: 2’03
- Source: China Central Television (CCTV)
- Restrictions: No access Chinese mainland
- Published: 2022-07-12 14:17
- Last Modified: 2022-07-12 14:21
- English
Shotlist
Jieyang City, Guangdong Province, south China – Recent (CCTV – No access Chinese mainland)
1. Aerial shots of offshore wind turbine parts
Tongliao City, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, north China – Recent (CCTV – No access Chinese mainland)
2. Various of workers installing onshore wind turbine
3. Aerial shots of wind turbine installation
4. Various of interior of new energy company
5. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Li Guojian, deputy general manager, Inner Mongolia New Energy Co., Ltd., State Power Investment Group (starting with shot 4/partially overlaid with shot 6):
“This is part of a large-scale unsubsidized wind power project aiming to reach grid parity. Currently, the project is progressing smoothly, and all wind turbines are planned to be hoisted by the end of this year. The project will supply 3 billion kilowatt hours of green electricity per year for Shandong Province.”
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
6. Workers
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
Delingha City, Qinghai Province, northwest China -Recent (CCTV – No access Chinese mainland)
7. Arial shots of power station, solar panels
8. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Liu Yiding, general manager, China General Nuclear Delingha Solar Energy Co., Ltd.:
“It is like a giant power bank. Compared with photovoltaic, wind power and other new energy power stations, it can be used as clean and flexible base-load power sources and electric sources for hump modulation, achieving 24-hour operation and improving the stability of the power system.”
9. Aerial shots of power station, solar panels
Qinghai Province, northwest China -Recent (CCTV – No access Chinese mainland)
10. Aerial shots of power station
11. Aerial shots of solar panels
12. Aerial shots of power station in canyon
Storyline
Multiple new energy projects promoting the use of wind, solar and photovotic powers are under construction across China, and are expected to go into operation before the end of next year.
The first wind turbine of Shenquan Offshore Wind Power Project phase two, one of China’s first offshore wind power projects to reach grid parity, has been successfully hoisted recently in south China’s Guangdong Province, laying the foundation for grid connection by the end of the year.
Meanwhile, another one-million kilowatt wind power transmission project incorporated into the national 14th Five-Year Plan is also under construction. When the project is put into operation, its green and clean electricity can replace 930,000 tons of standard coal every year.
“This is part of a large-scale unsubsidized wind power project aiming to reach grid parity. At present, the project is progressing smoothly, and all wind turbines are planned to be hoisted by the end of this year. The project will supply 3 billion kilowatt hours of green electricity per year for Shandong Province,” said Li Guojian, deputy general manager of State Power Investment Group Inner Mongolia New Energy Co., Ltd.
Meanwhile, the Delingha Solar Thermal Power Generation Project in Qinghai Province has generated about 60 million kilowatt hours of electricity so far this year.
“It is like a giant power bank. Compared with photovoltaic, wind power and other new energy power stations, it can be used as clean and flexible base-load power sources and electric sources for hump modulation, achieving 24-hour operation and improving the stability of the power system,” said Liu Yiding, general manager of CGN Delingha Solar Energy Co., Ltd.
The development of photovoltaic power generation has also led Qinghai to build an ecological photovoltaic park, helping turn the semi-desert green. The park, together with the Longyang Gorge 36 kilometers away, formed a power generation project that can make full use of water and light as clean energy sources.
In the meantime, China’s hydro-power and solar power generation have also increased in the first five months of the year, up 17.5 percent and 12.9 percent year on year respectively.