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China’s carbon dioxide emissions have held steady for the past 18 months, signaling a potential turning point in the country’s energy and climate trajectory. Despite continued economic growth and rising power demand, China has managed to stabilize its emissions through an accelerated rollout of renewable energy and improvements in industrial efficiency.
The latest data shows that emissions in the third quarter of 2025 were essentially unchanged compared to the same period a year earlier. This break follows a gradual slowdown that began in early 2024, suggesting that China’s long-anticipated emissions peak may already be within reach. The shift is largely driven by record levels of clean energy investment, particularly in solar and wind power, which have expanded rapidly across the country. Nuclear and hydropower generation have also contributed to offsetting the need for new coal-fired capacity.
In addition to the clean energy surge, several structural factors have helped curb emissions growth. Demand for carbon-intensive products such as cement and steel has slowed as construction and heavy industry cool, while electrification in transport and manufacturing continues to advance. Together, these trends have reduced the overall carbon intensity of China’s economic output.
However, experts caution that the stabilization of emissions does not guarantee a lasting decline. The current level remains near China’s all-time high, and a rebound in coal use or heavy industry could reverse recent progress. Moreover, China’s ongoing construction of new coal plants and high fossil fuel dependency pose challenges to meeting its long-term net-zero targets.
Globally, China’s emissions break offers a mix of optimism and realism. It demonstrates that rapid renewable energy deployment can begin to decouple emissions from economic growth, even in a developing economy of massive scale. Yet it also indicates how fragile progress remains in the face of competing energy security and economic priorities.
If sustained, China’s 18-month emissions stabilization could mark the beginning of a historic shift, from relentless growth in carbon output toward a gradual, sustained decline aligned with global climate goals.
Source:
https://esgnews.com/chinas-carbon-emissions-hold-steady-for-18-months-amid-energy-transition-shift/
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