China is installing innovative solar power projects across landscapes ranging from coastal mudflats to western deserts as part of efforts to achieve its green development goals.
Workers prepare panels that will be part of the massive solar farm. A worker carries two flotation devices that keep the panels above water. China is now the world's largest renewable energy investor. The government promises to spend $360 billion on clean energy projects by 2020, creating 13 million new jobs in the process.
The sun sets over electric pylons along a solar farm near Weifang in eastern China's Shandong province on March 22, 2024. Chinese battery companies, EV manufacturers and utilities are all racing to develop more advanced batteries to store the electricity from solar panels.
China is the runaway leader in supplying the world with the hardware to gather solar power. Shandong Province is taking an early lead in the country's solar energy development. But the country's grid is getting more than it can use in some places. Experts say China must quickly adapt to oversupply to remain leading in the global solar race.
Does China have solar power?
While China boasts a quarter of global solar capacity—double the U.S.—that only accounts for 2% of national power generation. Wang Duoli, a fisherman whose home was flooded out more than a decade ago, paddles near the solar farm.
Workers cleaning solar panels work on the rooftop of the factory of energy equipment manufacture Iraeta on the outskirts of Jinan in eastern China's Shandong province on March 21, 2024. It's the leading province for renewable energy capacity, but that also means it's the first to encounter the difficulties of rapid growth. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
“China's investment in solar really is a gift to the world,” says Amit Ronen, director of the Solar Institute of George Washington University. A worker carries a flotation device. A section of panels is pushed into the water. Like regular solar farms, floating solar technology is not new, and has been used before in Japan, Israel and the U.K.