In Focus

India won’t impose tariffs on Chinese solar products

India chooses to stimulate competition, and drive down prices of solar products, to grow renewable energy.

India won’t impose tariffs on Chinese solar products

India chooses to stimulate competition, and drive down prices of solar products, to grow renewable energy.

Huge market for small wind turbines in China

China’s potential for offshore wind power is placed at 750 GW, or three times that of onshore wind resources.

Japan's wind capacity records slowest growth in 10 years

Japan's wind power capacity rose 11.7 percent in the year to March 2011as the country was set to launch a new subsidy system to lure investors to the sector.

Vietnam promotes peaceful use of nuclear power

Vietnam wants peaceful and responsible use of nuclear power while ensuring power security and safety.

China may approve nuke plants again in first half

The government of China will resume approving new plants after the announcement of the nuclear safety plan cleared by the Ministry of Environmental Protection.

Pressure mounts for Indian PM to solve power woes

Indian PM Manmohan Singh will come under intense pressure to respond to the country's power crisis when he meets power executives.

China Power celebrates breakthroughs in wind projects

The Xianrendong Wind Farm Project located in Lufeng of Yunnan Province has been offcially approved by the Yunnan Development and Reform Commission.

Strong demand boosts Asian solar stocks

Asian solar stocks surged on a spate of good news about results and prospects worldwide.

Tepco's gas use projection on record high to offset nuke loss

Tepco bumped up its gas use plans to a fresh record high to make up for lost nuclear output after the destruction of its Fukushima Daiichi plant.

Japanese govt may take control of nuke plants from private utilities

The Japanese government may take control of the nation's nuclear power plants away from private utilities, in a bid to improve accountability.

Carbon tax to spark dispute between Chinese airlines and EU

Chinese airlines may sue the EU as they refuse to impose surcharges on customers relating to the emissions tax.

Malaysia to boost renewable energy generation by more than 5 times

Malaysia will increase the percentage of electricity generated from renewable energy to 5.5 per cent from the less than one per cent currently.

India’s largest solar power plant goes on line

The Adani Group has commissioned what is being touted as India’s largest solar power plant after a build process that took only five months.

Japan looking at taking control of nuclear power

Japan's government is considering taking control of the nation's nuclear power plants away from private utilities, in a bid to improve accountability of the industry, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Friday. The move comes as Tokyo Electric Power Co has fallen under criticism for its handling of the crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant triggered by the devastating earthquake and tsunami in March last year. "Japan should avoid a situation where private companies own nuclear power facilities and only enjoy the benefits (of low running costs) when the state takes care of compensation and decontamination arising from nuclear accidents," Trade Minister Yukio Edano, who oversees energy policy, was quoted as telling the paper. Edano also said the government must reach a clear decision on whether private companies should pay massive insurance fees and operate nuclear power facilities or hand over the benefits to the state, which also would take on the risks of nuclear accidents, according to the paper. As Tokyo Electric, better known as Tepco, faces massive compensation from the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25 years, the government has set up a bailout body for payment assistance. But with the firm's future still in doubt due to additional burdens of decommissioning the crippled reactors, the government may also inject about $13 billion into the company as early as the summer, effectively nationalising it. Edano reiterated that it was highly likely Tepco would be put under a state control but that he did not see it as a permanent move as private firms should basically be responsible for supplying electricity, the Yomiuri said. The trade ministry is set to deepen debate on nuclear power operations toward the spring and reach conclusions in step with a planned revision in the summer of the law governing nuclear damage compensation, the Yomiuri said. Through the overhaul, the government is likely to seek the public's understanding on the restart of nuclear reactors shut for regular maintenance, it added. The Nikkei business daily reported that the trade ministry was considering separating licensing system for power generation, transmission and retailing as part of power sector reform aimed at opening it up to smaller players. Last month, the government announced the agenda for power sector reform, including a possible separation of power generation and transmission operations, a long-discussed idea that would break the monopolies of regional power companies like Tepco, but stressed that any movement on the

India produces more power from bioenergy

The increasing number of bioenergy power generation projects in 2011 produced 500MW of energy.

Indonesian government policy hampers renewable energy growth

Indonesia still has a lot of hard work to do to exploit its full potential in renewable energy. And wean itself from a powerful dependence on coal.

CLP Power reduces planned tariff hike to 4.9% in 2012

The company's original proposal in Hong Kong was for a 9.2% increase.