Energy

China sets new annual wind power target at over twice previous goal

China aims to add at least 120 GW of new wind power capacity annually during the upcoming 15th five-year-plan period from 2026 to 2030, including at least 15 GW of offshore wind, reported Xinhua. The 120 GW target is over twice the annual goal of 50 GW set in 2020.

It has also set its total installed wind power capacity goals at 1.3 TW by 2030 and at least 2 TW by 2035.

These targets were announced on 20 October at the 2025 China Wind Power event, where over 1,000 global wind companies jointly issued the “Beijing Declaration on Wind Energy 2.0” outlining China’s most ambitious wind power goals yet, Xinhua noted. 

“China’s wind industry has a strong foundation, vast market potential and rapid innovation,” giving it the “ability to promote sustained and stable growth of wind power”, Xinhua quoted Pan Huimin, deputy director of the National Energy Administration’s New Energy and Renewable Energy Department, as saying at the event.

She noted that the government plans to speed up renewable energy projects in desert regions, promote offshore wind power development, and expand “wind+” models, such as wind-plus-storage and wind-to-hydrogen, the outlet reported.

The earlier 50 GW annual goal was pledged in the first Beijing Declaration on Wind Energy, released in 2020 and signed by over 400 companies. That declaration had targeted 800 GW of total installed wind power capacity by 2030. Since it was signed, China’s progress has surpassed expectations: from 2020 to 2024, the average annual wind power added exceeded 60 GW, Xinhua noted.

In September, China updated its Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC), pledging that by 2035, combined solar and wind capacity will reach around 3,600 GW – over six times the 2020 level. 

Analysts, however, see this goal as conservative given the pace of renewables expansion. The Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) estimates China could realistically reach 4,500 GW of wind and solar capacity by 2035.

Li Sheng, president of the Hydropower and Water Resources Planning and Design Institute, told the 21st Century Business Herald that integrating such massive amounts of fluctuating power into the grid could require a new power system that coordinates power generation, grid, load and storage to ensure the electricity can be delivered and used.

Building this would involve promoting greater grid flexibility, speeding up development of renewable energy storage, as well as modernisation of power systems, he noted.

Read Dialogue Earth’s previous analysis on China’s new renewable energy pricing and whether or not it could speed up coal’s exit. 

Cookies Settings

Dialogue Earth uses cookies to provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser. It allows us to recognise you when you return to Dialogue Earth and helps us to understand which sections of the website you find useful.

Required Cookies

Required Cookies should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

Dialogue Earth - Dialogue Earth is an independent organisation dedicated to promoting a common understanding of the world's urgent environmental challenges. Read our privacy policy.

Cloudflare - Cloudflare is a service used for the purposes of increasing the security and performance of web sites and services. Read Cloudflare's privacy policy and terms of service.

Functional Cookies

Dialogue Earth uses several functional cookies to collect anonymous information such as the number of site visitors and the most popular pages. Keeping these cookies enabled helps us to improve our website.

Google Analytics - The Google Analytics cookies are used to gather anonymous information about how you use our websites. We use this information to improve our sites and report on the reach of our content. Read Google's privacy policy and terms of service.

Advertising Cookies

This website uses the following additional cookies:

Google Inc. - Google operates Google Ads, Display & Video 360, and Google Ad Manager. These services allow advertisers to plan, execute and analyze marketing programs with greater ease and efficiency, while enabling publishers to maximize their returns from online advertising. Note that you may see cookies placed by Google for advertising, including the opt out cookie, under the Google.com or DoubleClick.net domains.

Twitter - Twitter is a real-time information network that connects you to the latest stories, ideas, opinions and news about what you find interesting. Simply find the accounts you find compelling and follow the conversations.

Facebook Inc. - Facebook is an online social networking service. China Dialogue aims to help guide our readers to content that they are interested in, so they can continue to read more of what they enjoy. If you are a social media user, then we are able to do this through a pixel provided by Facebook, which allows Facebook to place cookies on your web browser. For example, when a Facebook user returns to Facebook from our site, Facebook can identify them as part of a group of China Dialogue readers, and deliver them marketing messages from us, i.e. more of our content on biodiversity. Data that can be obtained through this is limited to the URL of the pages that have been visited and the limited information a browser might pass on, such as its IP address. In addition to the cookie controls that we mentioned above, if you are a Facebook user you can opt out by following this link.

Linkedin - LinkedIn is a business- and employment-oriented social networking service that operates via websites and mobile apps.