• Oct, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Australia can ride the waves of China’s “green capital tsunami” – but a change in attitude is needed

    A new report from Sydney based think tank Climate Energy Finance (CEF) has raised concerns that Australia’s investment policy towards China disincentivises a potential relationship that could deliver a “green capital tsunami” for Australia at a crucial point in its transition to renewables. The new report from CEF found that Chinese firms have committed over $US100 billion ($A145 billion) in outbound foreign decarbonisation investment across at least 130 major clean technology transactions since 2023. Read more
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  • Oct, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Australia may miss billions in green Chinese investment

    Think-tank Climate Energy Finance issued the predictions in its Green Capital Tsunami report released on Wednesday, which found Chinese investment in Australia had fallen to a decades-long low despite its record spending. The warnings come months after Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers announced an overhaul of foreign investment rules to take a “risk-based” approach to the sector, and more closely scrutinise investments in areas such as critical minerals. Read more
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  • Oct, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Australia may miss billions in green Chinese investment

    [On The West Australian]: Australia has the potential to tap into billions of dollars of renewable energy investments from China but only if it changes foreign investment policies and its approach to the superpower nation. Think-tank Climate Energy Finance issued the predictions in its Green Capital Tsunami report released on Wednesday, which found Chinese investment in Australia had fallen to a decades-long low despite its record spending. The warnings come months after Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers announced an overhaul of foreign investment rules to take a “risk-based” approach to the sector, and more closely scrutinise investments in areas such as critical minerals. Read more
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  • Oct, 2024 CEF in the media

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    China pumped in over $100 bln overseas in cleantech since 2023, research group says

    [Story also republished on MSN, The Economic Times, Market Screener, ThePrint, U.S. News & World Report, Yahoo Finance UK, and so on]: Chinese firms’ overseas investments in clean energy technology projects have exceeded $100 billion since the start of 2023 as they aim to avoid tariffs in the U.S. and elsewhere, Australian research group Climate Energy Finance (CEF) said on Wednesday. China is the world’s biggest producer and exporter of products such as solar panels, lithium batteries and electric vehicles, with its investment, innovation and manufacturing capabilities leading the world by an “astonishing margin”, CEF said in a research report. Read more
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  • Oct, 2024 CEF in the media

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    OP ED | Riding China’s green capital tsunami to harness cleaner future for Australia

    As the world races to decarbonise, China is leading the way. It committed more than $145 billion (USD 100 billion) in outbound foreign direct investment since 2023 across decarbonisation sectors including solar, wind, batteries, grid, new energy vehicles, hydro and green hydrogen. Yet, as the momentum of China’s green capital tsunami accelerates, Australia finds itself at a critical juncture: will we ride this wave, or be left behind? Read more
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  • Oct, 2024 CEF in the media

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    China outbound investment surges to record levels on clean energy ‘tsunami’

    Analysts at Climate Energy Finance, a Sydney-based research group, have recorded a “tsunami” of investment in renewable energy and transport electrification projects, calculating Chinese companies have committed $109.2bn in outbound FDI across 130 clean technology transactions since the start of 2023, according to corporate announcements and financial statements. Tim Buckley, CEF director, said China was not just exporting its cleantech manufacturing capacity surplus, but was increasingly exporting its technology, engineering, supply chain and financing capacities. Xuyang Dong, a CEF analyst, noted that the “dramatic” increase in overseas FDI coincided with plunging prices for many cleantech products in China, following years of scaled up domestic manufacturing. Prices for solar modules and batteries have halved this year. Read more
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  • Oct, 2024 CEF in the media

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    China Clean Energy Sector Eyes $100 Billion in Overseas Spending

    China’s world-leading clean energy companies are investing more abroad amid fierce domestic competition and trade tensions with rivals like the US, according to a report by Climate Energy Finance. “When Chinese firms build a production facility elsewhere, it brings its technology, expertise, capital, experience, as well as opportunities for expanding local labor markets and boosting other nations’ domestic energy transition,” said Xuyang Dong, an energy policy analyst and one of the report’s authors. Read more
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  • Oct, 2024 CEF in the media

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    [The Business Times] China clean energy sector eyes US$100 billion in overseas spending

    [Republished from Bloomberg] China’s world-leading clean energy companies are investing more abroad amid fierce domestic competition and trade tensions with rivals like the US, according to a report by Climate Energy Finance. “When Chinese firms build a production facility elsewhere, it brings its technology, expertise, capital, experience, as well as opportunities for expanding local labor markets and boosting other nations’ domestic energy transition,” said Xuyang Dong, an energy policy analyst and one of the report’s authors. Read more
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  • Sep, 2024 CEF in the media

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    VIDEO | Tim Buckley on nuclear

    Tim told Alicia Barry on ABC TV’s Close of Business that Peter Dutton’s detail free nuclear power plan is costly, a waste of taxpayer’s money, and will delay Australia’s energy transition by 20 years. Read more
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  • Sep, 2024 CEF in the media

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    China’s accelerating green transition

    Two-thirds of all new solar and wind power projects are based in the country. But to wean industry off coal, Beijing needs to set up a real energy market. If things go Xi’s way over the coming years, that will no longer be the case. “Considering the significance of the scale of everything China does, reaching or exceeding almost every energy transition target it sets has far-reaching impacts for the climate and our global emissions reduction goals,” says Xuyang Dong, a China energy analyst at Sydney-based think-tank Climate Energy Finance. Spending levels across the sector will need to increase over the coming decades if China is to reach Xi’s dual carbon targets, says Dong, of CEF. That includes adding around 330GW of solar, 80GW of wind capacity and 4GW of nuclear to the grid every year until 2040 — numbers that are “significantly above the current run rate”.  Read more
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  • Sep, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Daily Briefing | Leaders at UN urge world’s richest to do more on climate

    [On Carbon Brief] The Biden administration has “proposed prohibiting key Chinese software and hardware in connected vehicles on American roads due to national security concerns”, Reuters reports, adding that the move could in effect stop “nearly all Chinese cars from entering the US market”. The Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post (SCMP) publishes an opinion article by Xuyang Dong and Tim Buckley, analysts at thinktank Climate Energy Finance. They argue: “Viewing China’s overcapacity merely as a threat overlooks the massive potential it brings for an accelerated roll-out of clean energy in a world that must rapidly decarbonise to tackle the existential problem of climate change.” Read more
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  • Sep, 2024 CEF in the media

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    China monthly economic reports understate power output as small-scale renewables surge

    Surging small-scale renewables generation is helping China address growing power demand and slashing the role of coal in the country’s power mix, but Beijing’s widely followed monthly data reports omit output from the fast-growing sector. “China NBS’s generation data for wind and especially solar only capture some of the generation, whereas their capacity figures show the full picture,” said Xuyang Dong, China energy policy analyst at Sydney-based think tank Climate Energy Finance. Read more
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