this post was submitted on 22 Jan 2025
199 points (98.1% liked)

Futurology

1904 readers
346 users here now

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

The new US President has used his first 24 hours to pull all US government support for the green energy transition. He wants to ban any new wind energy projects and withdraw support for electric cars. His new energy policy refused to even mention solar panels, wind turbines, or battery storage - the world's fastest-growing energy sources. Meanwhile, he wants to pour money into dying and declining industries - like gasoline-powered cars and expanding oil drilling.

China was the global leader in 21st-century energy before, but its future global dominance is now assured. There will be trillions of dollars to be made supplying the planet with green energy infrastructure in the coming decades. Decarbonizing the planet, and electrifying the global south with renewables will be the largest industrial project in human history.

Source 1

Source 2

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Philosofuel@futurology.today 7 points 6 hours ago (3 children)

It's indeed going to be different, because your selling some independence with renewable energy tech. Buy a solar panel from Chian now, and you have 25 years or more to figure out how to built your own replacement. but in the short to medium term at least (I expect) China will dominate these markets. I don't expect the EU or India, or other countries to catch up soon on the level and price of green tech that China now has.

[–] Skua@kbin.earth 5 points 5 hours ago

Europe is big on wind turbines, at least. Vestas, Siemens, and Nordex supply far more of the world outside of China than their Chinese competitors do based on this https://gwec.net/wind-turbine-manufacturers-see-record-year-driven-by-growth-in-home-markets/

[–] Lugh@futurology.today 4 points 5 hours ago

I don’t expect the EU or India, or other countries to catch up soon on the level and price of green tech that China now has.

Europe would be smart to mandate some of the billions they are going to spend on this, come from Euro-sources. It makes it much easier to match Chinese manufacturing economies for Euro-exports elsewhere.

[–] MrMakabar@slrpnk.net 3 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Green tech is a wide field. In wind turbines the two largest companies in the world are from the EU. High speed rail also has a lot of European companies with great technologies, as well as Japan. In the battery world Japan and South Korea have some large companies as well.

Solar is one of the areas, where China just rules though.

[–] Philosofuel@futurology.today 2 points 4 hours ago

Thanks for the nuance, I was a bit generic, but you are right, their is more clean tech in other countries out there. But besides solar China is also big in EVs and batteries as well. We will see how it goes - really interested how some countries are leapfrogging in their development using more green energy technologies.