两部门发文促进新能源消纳和调控
Ke Ji Ri Bao·2025-11-11 23:47

Core Viewpoint - The "Guiding Opinions" issued by the National Development and Reform Commission and the National Energy Administration aim to improve the policies and measures for the consumption and regulation of renewable energy, supporting the construction of a new energy system and a new power system [1][2]. Group 1: Objectives and Goals - By 2030, a multi-level renewable energy consumption and regulation system will be established to ensure smooth grid connection, diversified utilization, and efficient operation of renewable energy, meeting the annual demand for 200 million kilowatts of new renewable energy [1][2]. - By 2035, a new power system capable of accommodating a high proportion of renewable energy will be basically established, with a unified national electricity market playing a foundational role in the allocation of renewable resources [1][2]. Group 2: Key Tasks and Measures - The "Guiding Opinions" outline five key tasks with 19 specific measures, focusing on guiding renewable energy development and consumption, promoting innovative new models and business formats for renewable energy consumption, enhancing the adaptability of the new power system to renewable energy, improving the national unified electricity market system, and strengthening technological innovation support for renewable energy consumption [2]. - To balance the external delivery and local consumption of renewable energy from "desert, Gobi, and wasteland" bases, the opinions propose reasonable layout of external delivery bases in arid regions to improve economic viability [2]. - The opinions emphasize optimizing the integrated development and consumption of hydropower, wind, and solar energy, leveraging large hydropower bases in the southwest, and enhancing the utilization of existing hydropower delivery channels by reasonably increasing renewable energy allocation [2]. - To improve the grid's capacity to accept renewable energy, the opinions call for optimizing national electricity flow, expanding the range of renewable resource allocation, and steadily increasing the scale of inter-provincial and inter-regional transmission channels [2].