A plant-by-plant strategy for high-ambition coal power phaseout in China.
Ryna Yiyun CuiNathan E HultmanDiyang CuiHaewon C McJeonSha YuMorgan R EdwardsArijit SenKaihui SongChristina BowmanLeon ClarkeJunjie KangJiehong LouFuqiang YangJiahai YuanWeirong ZhangMengye ZhuPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
More than half of current coal power capacity is in China. A key strategy for meeting China's 2060 carbon neutrality goal and the global 1.5 °C climate goal is to rapidly shift away from unabated coal use. Here we detail how to structure a high-ambition coal phaseout in China while balancing multiple national needs. We evaluate the 1037 currently operating coal plants based on comprehensive technical, economic and environmental criteria and develop a metric for prioritizing plants for early retirement. We find that 18% of plants consistently score poorly across all three criteria and are thus low-hanging fruits for rapid retirement. We develop plant-by-plant phaseout strategies for each province by combining our retirement algorithm with an integrated assessment model. With rapid retirement of the low-hanging fruits, other existing plants can operate with a 20- or 30-year minimum lifetime and gradually reduced utilization to achieve the 1.5 °C or well-below 2 °C climate goals, respectively, with complete phaseout by 2045 and 2055.