China's Clean Energy Surge: Dominance in Solar, Wind, and Batteries Reshapes Global Power Landscape

March 8, 2026
China's Clean Energy Surge: Dominance in Solar, Wind, and Batteries Reshapes Global Power Landscape
  • China is rapidly expanding its dominance in clean energy manufacturing, now producing an overwhelming share of global solar panels, wind turbines, and lithium-ion batteries, giving it significant influence over electrification timelines and costs.

  • Western policymakers face a choice between defensive tariffs or pursuing industrial competition and strategic investment to scale capacity, recognizing that who builds and controls supply chains matters as much as emissions reductions.

  • Critics warn of potential weaponization of supply chains if dominance goes unchecked, while supporters argue that China’s scale fosters interdependence and predictable behavior that can push rivals toward diversification.

  • China’s strategy centers on industrial policy aimed at scale and export power, using local-content rules, subsidies, tax incentives, and trade measures to create a self-reinforcing cycle of deployment, manufacturing scale, lower costs, and global market share.

  • Decarbonization can align with industrial upgrading and job creation, as scale and long-term planning enable continued growth without sacrificing development.

  • The expansion of wind, solar, and batteries is driving a structural shift in power systems, with renewables displacing coal and gas and electrification spreading to data centers, AI infrastructure, industrial heat, and transport fleets.

  • Global energy implications include China potentially capturing value across the electrified economy by dominating turbines, panels, batteries, and critical minerals, creating concentration risks while incentivizing diversification by other regions.

  • Coal remains a major portion of China’s energy mix, about half of capacity, but utilization and operating hours will determine its ongoing role as wind and solar growth modulates demand.

  • China’s domestic market acts as a launchpad for scale, enabling cost leadership and pricing power that translates into leadership in technology and supply chains.

  • China accounts for a substantial share of global green energy investment, roughly 39%, with clean energy sectors making up about 10% of its GDP, and wind and solar capacity doubling in a short span, signaling a shift away from fossil generation at the margin.

Summary based on 1 source


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