Wind Power in China

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A01=Julia Kirch Kirkegaard
Aeroelastic Codes
Author_Julia Kirch Kirkegaard
Category=KCVG
Category=KNBT
China's Wind Power
Chinese Government
Chinese Wind
Chinese wind energy industry transformation
Chinese Wind Power
Chinese wind power marketisation
Chinese Wind Turbine
Chinese Wind Turbine Manufacturer
Control System Software
Controversy Mapping
critical software technology
energy sector innovation
Energy Sources
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fragmented Authoritarianism
Global Innovation Networks
Increasing Wind Power Penetration
intellectual property rights
Ipr Protection
marketisation processes
new green energy technologies
power grid integration
Quality Crisis
renewable energy policy
socialist market economy
software algorithm development
South East Asian Tigers
Wind Farm
Wind Farm Developers
Wind Power
Wind Power Development
Wind Power Penetration
Wind Power Sector
Wind Turbine
wind turbine control systems
Wind Turbine Industry
Wind Turbine Manufacturers

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367583156
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Whilst China’s growing economy is widely regarded as being responsible for severe environmental degradation and a high reliance on energy from fossil fuels, China is emerging as a potential leader in new green energy technologies. Outlining the extraordinary growth in China’s wind power capacity since 2005, this book explores the deliberate creation of a whole industry and the strategy of transitioning the power sector to renewable energy by accelerated experimentation and through literally pushing the emerging wind power sector to its limits. Investigating how wind power may not always be considered as sustainable in a wider Chinese developmental context, the book traces the struggle China has had in getting this high technology sector to qualify as truly Chinese scientific development, whilst often being opaquely at the mercy of foreign expertise, technology, and certification. The book furthermore exposes the surprising nuances, dynamics, and potency of unexpected players in Chinese wind power marketisation. Complex interplays are revealed between wind turbine control systems, algorithms in critical software technology, relationships between suppliers, wind farm developers, financiers, the electrical grid itself, the coal lobby, the broader Chinese state, and much more. The book has important implications far beyond wind power and contemporary China studies, highlighting the much wider story of China’s fragmented and experimental style of innovating, upgrading, and greening.

Julia Kirch Kirkegaard is a Postdoctoral Fellow at Stanford University, as well as at Copenhagen Business School and the Technical University of Denmark

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