4.7 Article

Is local grid parity affordable in China? Discussion on the regional wind power potential and investment returns under policy uncertainty

Journal

ENERGY POLICY
Volume 170, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2022.113254

Keywords

Renewable energy; Wind power potential; Grid parity; Investment return

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71704100]
  2. Shanghai Pujiang Program [2019PJC048]
  3. Innovative Research Team of Shanghai University of Finance and Economics [2020110930]

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This study quantifies the wind resource endowment in different regions of China and evaluates the impact of various grid parity scenarios on regional wind power investments. The results indicate that wind power investment returns decrease in all regions with decreasing feed-in tariffs, with the western regions being more affected. Additionally, the investment return of regional wind power is positively correlated with wind power potential but negatively correlated with electricity price uncertainty. Regions with abundant wind power resources cannot guarantee sufficient returns on investment when electricity price uncertainty increases.
In China, achieving grid parity is critical for a low-cost carbon-neutral transition over the next decades. However, it may post investment dilemma in renewable energy, given the significant differences in resource endowment across various regions. In this paper, we quantify the regional wind resource endowment and evaluate the impact of different grid parity scenarios on regional wind power investments, including long-term contracts with fixed prices, free contracts with decreasing prices and the marketisation of the electricity market. The results show that while the wind power investment returns decrease in all regions with the feed-in tariff degression, the regions in west China with less developed economies are more affected. Additionally, the regional wind power investment return significantly and positively correlates with the regional wind power potential, but the degree of correlation decreases with the increase of electricity price uncertainty. Regions with abundant wind power resources, such as Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang and Gansu, cannot guarantee a sufficient return on investment when the uncertainty of electricity prices increases. It is suggested that alternative support schemes (e.g., long-term contract) and safeguard policies should be designed to reduce the uncertainty of electricity prices and offset the investment incentives created by subsidies (especially in western regions).

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