What climate crisis? China tackles energy shortage by boosting coal production

What climate crisis? China tackles energy shortage by boosting coal production
What climate crisis? China tackles energy shortage by boosting coal production

China said it has increased daily coal production by over one million tonnes per day, easing its energy shortage as world leaders gather in Britain for climate talks billed as one of the last chances to avert catastrophic global warming.

But in a blow to the Cop26 summit, China's president Xi Jinping will not even give a 'virtual' speech in Glasgow, instead only submitting a written statement.

The world's biggest coal importer has battled widespread power cuts in recent months - particularly in its industrialised northeast - that have disrupted supply chains, due to strict emissions targets and record prices for the fossil fuel.

But the crisis is now winding down thanks to a boost in domestic coal output, according to a statement from China's top economic planning body late Monday. 

China said it has increased daily coal production by over one million tonnes, easing its energy shortage as world leaders gather in Britain for climate talks in Glasgow for Cop26. Pictured: An excavator loads coal into a truck at an open-pit coal mine on October 19, in Inner Mongolia, October 19 (file photo)

China said it has increased daily coal production by over one million tonnes, easing its energy shortage as world leaders gather in Britain for climate talks in Glasgow for Cop26. Pictured: An excavator loads coal into a truck at an open-pit coal mine on October 19, in Inner Mongolia, October 19 (file photo)

China's National Development and Reform Commission said average daily coal production has risen to above 11.5 million tonnes since the middle of October, up by 1.1 million tonnes compared with the end of September.

The production surge comes as world leaders - but not Jinping - convene in Glasgow for Cop26 talks to secure more ambitious global greenhouse gas emissions.

Xi, whose country is the world's largest emitter of planet-heating gases, has instead submitted a written statement to the summit. 

The shortage has pushed China to take other drastic measures, with Radio Free Asia (RFA) reporting that the country is defying UN sanctions by purchasing coal from neighbouring North Korea.

Citing Chinese sources, RFA said that North Korean companies are smuggling the fuel in small ships and offloading it at sea, despite a 2017 UN ban on North Korean coal exports to limit its source of funds for its nuclear weapons programme. 

The coal-smuggling trading companies are run by powerful North Korean government organisations, RFA reported, citing a trade official from North Pyongan. 

In recent months, several Chinese factories were forced to halt operations due to power outages, raising concern about global supply chains.

The squeeze had also been exacerbated by Beijing's zero-tolerance Covid-19 policy that saw it all but close its borders to the outside world, hindering shipments of raw materials from overseas.

A trade tiff with Australia also heightened the drop in coal imports.

But at one point in late October daily output hit 11.72 million tonnes, a record in recent years.

Spot prices for the fuel are also 'falling fast' with the main contract for thermal coal halving to 970 yuan per tonne over the previous eight days.

Pictured: World Leaders - minus China's president Xi Jinping - pose for a group photo during an evening reception for the attending Heads of State and Government, to mark the opening day of the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow

Pictured: World Leaders - minus China's president Xi Jinping - pose for a group photo during an evening reception for the attending Heads of State and Government, to mark the opening day of the Cop26 climate summit in Glasgow

'Levels of coal storage ... have also risen rapidly with the gradual improvement of the supply-demand situation,' the agency said.

China generates about 60 percent of its energy from burning coal.

Beijing submitted a renewed climate plan to the United Nations days before the COP26 climate summit, confirming its goal to achieve carbon neutrality before 2060 and slash its emissions intensity - the amount of emissions per unit of economic output - by more than 65 percent.

In China's absence, world leaders - including Joe Biden, Boris Johnson, Angela Merkel and Justin Trudeau - met on Monday night for the biggest gathering of Government representatives since the birth of the United Nations - ahead of the last 'full' day of the COP26 summit. 

The congregation of leaders appeared in high spirits as they put disagreements on hold and capped off the first day at the COP26 climate conference with a lavish royal reception at Glasgow's Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum.

During the night, Britain's Prime Minister, who hosted the evening at the recently renovated gallery, told leaders the summit was 'quite an extraordinary historic event' and it was even more important because 'we face nothing less than a mortal threat to our planet and to our civilisation'.

Pictured: Chinese President Xi Jinping attends the 16th G20 Leaders' Summit via video link in Beijing, capital of China, Oct. 31, 2021. The leader will not be attending Cop26

Pictured: Chinese President Xi Jinping attends the 16th G20 Leaders' Summit via video link in Beijing, capital of China, Oct. 31, 2021. The leader will not be attending Cop26

He also hailed Prince Charles as 'the man to defuse the bomb at the world's moment of danger' and described him as a 'prophet without honour'.

His comments came as world leaders prepared for a day make-or-break day negotiations during what will be the final day of the climate change conference for many of them – with leaders leaving delegates behind to negotiate on their behalf.

The lavish reception was opened by the Queen who urged world leaders to 'earn a place in history' and

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