Renewables will be at the heart of China's energy demand, passing from 12% to 59% by 2060, revealing a largely decarbonized power sector. In this regard, China has recently achieved massive success: it installed more offshore wind capacity last year than the rest of the world combined. However, renewables will only overtake other technologies after 2030. Moreover, nuclear energy capacity also receives substantial investments. As a result, nuclear power will sustain China's flexibility demand, mainly in the second half of the century, with up to 14.7% of the Chinese total energy demand by 2060.
In any case, fossil fuels will still play an important role in 2060 China, with 26% of the energy demand from the non-electricity sector still coming from carbonized resources in the IEA's forecast. These numbers emphasize the critical role of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technologies, Offset/compensation, and other carbon sinks in the Chinese policies to meet the net-zero objective. Without these technologies, China’s carbon neutrality target will remain unreachable.
In the various transition scenarios, the role given to gas does not appear central. However, Chinese authorities and stakeholders perceive gas as the most accessible safety net in the short-run. This feeling was reinforced by the recent coal crisis, which has shed light on the imperative of energy stability. There is therefore little doubt that a switch from coal-fired to gas-fired facilities will also be determinant in meeting China’s 2030 peak. In this regard, Chinese energy major PetroChina considers the abovementioned numbers as unrealistic. Instead, they estimate gas demand in 2060 to be more than twice as high, at around 11.6% of the Chinese energy demand.
All that gas has to come from somewhere…
Despite having significant domestic gas resources and investing in exploration, China still heavily relies on gas imports. The country already imports 45% of its gas consumption - around 147 Bn cm of gas - and this figure is growing each year. In 2021, LNG import increased by 18%, and Australia (39.3%) and the US (11.6%) were the biggest Chinese LNG suppliers. Meanwhile, pipeline gas imports rose by more than 22%. Within these numbers, Russian gas currently accounts for only 6.26% of the total gas imported to China in 2021, but still represents a year-on-year 154.2% growth.
The China-Russia 30-year gas deal, announced by Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin on February 4, will turn Russia into the main Chinese gas supplier. This announcement should be understood in the context of an uncertain Chinese energy transition strategy and the awakened sense of energy security urgency. The colossal changes needed to reach the "dual carbon" goals force Chinese authorities to hedge their bets. The Power of Siberia 1 pipeline already connects China to Russia’s Yakutia Gas fields and has delivered 16.5 Bb cm of Gas in 2021. The new deal should boost Russian Far East gas deliveries by up to 10 Bn cm per year and 48 Bn cm per year once at full capacity.
The current Power of Siberia 1 network is not connected to the pipelines sending Russian gas to Europe. However, depending on the energy transition scenario, the potential Chinese growing gas demand could require an extra 325 Bn cm more of gas on an annual basis at its peak. China and Russia are currently discussing four more pipeline projects.
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