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南方区域绿电绿证消费榜单发布 能源与科技企业成主力军
Xin Lang Cai Jing·2025-09-28 11:47

Core Insights - The 2024 China Green Power (Green Certificate) Consumption TOP100 ranking has been released, showcasing significant growth in green electricity consumption among companies in southern China [1][2] - The ranking reflects the explosive growth of the green electricity and green certificate market in the southern region, with a notable increase in both trading volume and participant numbers [1][2] Group 1: Market Overview - In 2024, the southern region's green electricity trading volume reached 234.2 billion kilowatt-hours, a year-on-year increase of 157% [1] - The green certificate trading scale reached 68.29 million certificates (equivalent to 68.29 billion kilowatt-hours), marking a 72-fold increase year-on-year [1] - Over 9,000 entities participated in the market, with green certificate trading achieving nationwide coverage across all 34 provincial-level administrative regions [1] Group 2: Regional Highlights - Guangdong led the southern region with a green electricity and certificate trading volume of 44.4 billion kilowatt-hours, ranking first in the southern region and third nationally [2] - Yunnan became a core province for green electricity supply with a 90% share of installed capacity from green energy [2] - Guangxi attracted over 2,000 participants in the green electricity and certificate market, the highest in the southern region [2] - Guizhou's consumption focused on new energy battery material production, while Hainan's consumption was concentrated in the service industry [2] Group 3: Corporate Contributions - Foxconn ranked seventh in national green electricity consumption, with its energy management department highlighting the positive impact of the RE100 initiative on green certificate consumption confidence [3] - The use of Chinese green electricity certificates can help companies meet RE100 audit requirements and significantly reduce carbon emission compliance costs [3] - The Guangzhou Electric Power Trading Center is collaborating with provincial trading centers to establish a "1+N" green electricity ranking system, expanding the current consumption ranking to include power generation and sales companies [3]