Main content

China's green energy revolution

China may have stopped its greenhouse gas emissions from growing thanks to exponential growth in renewables like wind and solar. But could the world's biggest polluter go further?

China is installing solar panels and wind turbines so fast that its greenhouse gases emissions may now have peaked. If this trend is confirmed, it would be a major milestone in the fight against climate change because China is the world's largest polluter.

The BBC’s Beijing Correspondent Laura Bicker has travelled across China to see the country’s clean energy revolution first hand.

She’s visited solar farms in the deserts of Inner Mongolia and in the tea plantations of Yunnan. Laura even discovered a huge lake with panels floating on the surface!

But she also saw how China’s addiction to coal is continuing – with new power plants still being built and many poorer Chinese needing to burn coal to get through the winter.

In this edition of The Climate Question, Laura chats about her reporting with hosts Graihagh Jackson and Jordan Dunbar. They discuss whether the world’s biggest polluter is moving fast enough to meet its green energy targets, and what that means for China and the rest of the world.

Got a question you’d like answered? Email: TheClimateQuestion@BBC.com

Presenters: Graihagh Jackson and Jordan Dunbar
Guest: Laura Bicker, BBC China Correspondent
Producer in China: Joyce Liu
Production Team in London: Simon Watts and Grace Braddock
Sound Mix: Philip Bull and Tom Brignell
Editor: Simon Watts

Image: BBC - Solar panels in Yunnan, China

Available now

26 minutes

Featured

  • .

Broadcasts

  • Sun 22 Feb 202614:06GMT
  • Sun 22 Feb 202614:32GMT
  • Sun 22 Feb 202623:06GMT
  • Last Wednesday09:32GMT
  • Last Wednesday20:06GMT
  • Last Wednesday21:06GMT
  • Saturday05:32GMT

Podcast