The latest Middle East tensions sheds light on how the world's three largest oil consumers have taken different approaches to ...
(Corrects base year for China's Paris agreement carbon intensity target to 2005, not 2026, in paragraph 2) By Colleen Howe ...
China’s large crude reserves, EV push and renewable expansion may reduce its exposure to oil shocks from the Iran war ...
China's green transition isn't climate policy — it's an industrial strategy. Here's how Beijing is positioning itself to control the future of global electrification.
China is embarking on a groundbreaking project to develop the world’s largest 50 MW floating wind turbine, designed to withstand the severe conditions of typhoon-prone regions. This ambitious ...
Beijing's official target remains to peak carbon emissions by 2030 and to reach carbon neutrality by 2060. Early signals ...
It’s safe to assume that China’s latest five-year plan was drawn up well before the current conflict in the Middle East sent oil prices soaring. But the crisis has underscored the dangers of heavy ...
China will aim to use more renewable energy such as green hydrogen and green ammonia to avoid curtailments of solar and wind power whose soaring capacity sometimes boosts clean power generation beyond ...
As Brent crude approaches $100 a barrel, clean energy advocates say the Hormuz crisis is the latest proof that fossil fuel dependence leaves consumers at the mercy of distant wars.
Often compared with MIT or Stanford, Tsinghua is widely viewed as China's top engineering university and a key pipeline for talent entering the country's tech and industrial giants.
The global energy transition and the continuous expansion of oil and gas infrastructure place unprecedented demands on ...