2025年中欧绿色合作推动电力行业低碳转型:挑战与机遇报告-绿色和平
Sou Hu Cai Jing·2025-11-03 08:42

Core Insights - The report highlights the progress, challenges, and optimization paths of Sino-European green cooperation in the low-carbon transition of the electricity sector, providing references for global climate governance collaboration [1][2]. Group 1: Current Status of Sino-European Green Cooperation - Sino-European green cooperation has established a solid foundation and diverse outcomes, with the EU aiming for climate neutrality by 2050 through the European Green Deal and China planning to invest $625 billion in clean energy by 2024 [1][2]. - Both parties have reached a consensus on not building new overseas coal power projects, and significant progress has been made in renewable energy cooperation, with China's renewable energy capacity expected to reach 2.159 billion kilowatts by 2025, accounting for 59.2% of total installed capacity [2]. Group 2: Key Challenges in Cooperation - The cooperation faces multiple structural challenges, including fragmented global climate governance, intensified geopolitical competition, and differences in energy structures and political landscapes within the EU [2][3]. - The EU's "de-risking" policy towards China and trade frictions, such as the increase in electric vehicle tariffs to 45.3%, complicate regulatory coordination [2]. Group 3: Proposed Cooperation Paths - The report proposes two core cooperation paths: enhancing climate ambition through the "Sino-European +" framework and deepening electricity decarbonization cooperation, focusing on renewable energy complementarity and green electricity certification [3][21]. - Sino-European cooperation is positioned as a key force in global green transition, aiming to overcome geopolitical differences and strengthen rule compatibility and industrial collaboration [3].