Rows of solar panels in a Chinese desert reflecting China wind and solar capacity growth under the Five-Year Plan clean energy targets

China plans to double its already massive clean energy supply by 2035

China has submitted updated climate targets to the United Nations that set a single, staggering number at the center of global energy policy: 3,600 gigawatts of combined wind and solar capacity by 2035 C.E. That figure — locked into China’s nationally determined contributions under the Paris Agreement — is larger than the entire current electricity-generating capacity of the United States, and it roughly doubles what China already has installed today. For a country that already builds more clean energy infrastructure each year than the rest of the world combined, the commitment is an unmistakable signal that the energy transition is now embedded in China’s core national development strategy.

At a glance

  • Wind and solar capacity: China’s updated NDCs target 3,600 GW of combined wind and solar by 2035 C.E. — more than the total electricity generating capacity of the United States today.
  • Non-fossil energy share: The accompanying 15th Five-Year Plan calls for doubling total non-fossil energy consumption by 2035 C.E. compared to 2025 C.E. levels, pushing clean energy toward nearly 29% of total national consumption.
  • Clean energy GDP: Renewable and clean energy sectors now account for 11.4% of China’s GDP — nearly double their share in 2022 C.E. — meaning China’s recent economic growth would have missed its own targets without the clean energy boom.

Why this commitment is different

Climate pledges are often written to inspire rather than instruct. This one arrives with an industrial architecture behind it.

China’s Five-Year Plans are not aspirational documents. They are top-down blueprints that mobilize state-owned banks, provincial governments, private investors, and manufacturing supply chains toward a single set of directives. When China’s government targeted dominance in solar manufacturing through its “Made in China 2025” strategy, skeptics were numerous. By 2025 C.E., Chinese companies controlled every major segment of the solar panel value chain. The track record matters here: China’s clean energy buildouts have consistently outpaced their own government projections, suggesting these targets tend to function as floors rather than ceilings.

The 15th Five-Year Plan, covering 2026 C.E. through 2030 C.E., cascades these targets down to provinces, state enterprises, and lenders — each expected to align their capital and operations accordingly. That coordination at scale is what makes the 3,600 GW figure credible in a way that voluntary pledges from less centrally organized economies often are not.

What it means for global energy costs

China produces roughly 80% of the world’s solar panels. That market position means its domestic buildout functions, in effect, as a global cost-reduction engine.

The mechanism is the solar learning curve: every time global installed solar capacity doubles, manufacturing costs fall by a predictable margin — historically around 20%. China drives most of those doublings. As Chinese factories scale up to meet the 3,600 GW target, panels and turbines get cheaper for buyers everywhere — in sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, Latin America, and beyond. Countries with no direct connection to Chinese industrial policy still benefit every time they procure clean energy equipment, because the price they pay reflects China’s accumulated manufacturing volume.

According to BloombergNEF, China already leads the world in grid-scale battery installations, and that lead is expected to widen through the 2030s C.E. as the new targets accelerate investment in ultra-high-voltage transmission and multi-gigawatt-hour storage projects — the infrastructure required to keep a grid stable when 3,600 GW of intermittent generation is feeding into it.

The motivation behind the numbers

Understanding why China is doing this helps clarify whether the commitment will hold.

As Sightline Climate has noted, China’s clean energy mandate has been “primarily driven by energy security and economic leadership, not decarbonization.” Volatile fossil fuel supply chains — including the strategically sensitive Strait of Hormuz — make energy self-sufficiency a national security priority. Clean energy resolves that vulnerability while simultaneously positioning China as the dominant supplier of the technologies the rest of the world needs to decarbonize. Solar panels, wind turbines, batteries, and the raw material processing chains behind them are all sectors where Chinese companies have built commanding advantages.

The 3,600 GW target is not a climate gesture. It is a convergence of energy security, economic strategy, and manufacturing dominance — which is precisely why analysts take it seriously. When a government’s clean energy goals align with its industrial and geopolitical interests, the probability of follow-through rises substantially.

This dynamic also has consequences for clean energy access in the developing world. As the International Energy Agency has documented, falling solar costs have been the single biggest driver of new electricity access in lower-income countries. China’s scale makes those cost reductions happen faster than any other force in the global energy system.

An honest look at the gaps

China still burns more coal than the rest of the world combined, and the pace at which aging coal plants actually retire — rather than simply being joined by new renewables — remains one of the most closely watched questions in global climate analysis. The Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air has noted that new coal permitting in China has not fully reversed, even as renewables surge. NDC targets are also not legally binding in the international sense, meaning the gap between ambition and enforcement will matter enormously through 2035 C.E.

The most critical signal to watch in the coming months will be specific investment decisions on grid modernization and energy storage. A target of 3,600 GW of intermittent power requires the transmission and storage infrastructure to match — and the scale of those commitments will be the truest measure of how seriously the government intends to manage the integration challenge, not just hit the capacity number.

Even accounting for those uncertainties, the direction is clear. China has now embedded the energy transition into its core national development framework, with a target large enough to reshape the economics of clean energy for the entire planet. The question is no longer whether the transition accelerates — it is how cleanly, and how quickly, the fossil fuel side of the ledger follows.

For more on global renewable energy progress, see the Good News for Humankind archive on renewable energy.

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