Key takeaways
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- China added 543 GW of new power capacity in 2025, led by 315 GW of solar and 119 GW of wind
- Total generation added since end-2021 is larger than the entire US power system, highlighting a scale gap in energy infrastructure
- Beijing’s priority is security of supply and low-cost power to support energy-intensive growth sectors like AI, robotics, and advanced materials
- Risks are shifting from “build capacity” to “use capacity,” as renewables strain grids, curtailment rises, and coal utilization falls even while new coal capacity is added
What Happened?
China is executing an unprecedented energy expansion to ensure abundant electricity for industrial growth and emerging, power-hungry sectors. In 2025 alone, it added 543 gigawatts of capacity across technologies, with solar accounting for more than half of additions and wind and thermal power also hitting records. The pace has accelerated since power shortages in 2021–2022, with annual additions averaging above 400 GW since 2023, far above prior years.
Why It Matters?
Electricity is becoming a binding constraint on economic competitiveness as AI and data-center demand surge. China’s ability to build generation faster than peers reduces the risk of power bottlenecks and helps keep industrial electricity prices competitive—an advantage for scaling AI infrastructure, automation-heavy manufacturing, and materials processing. For investors, the implication is a structural edge for China-linked supply chains in energy-intensive industries, while the US faces tighter electricity markets and longer timelines to add capacity, potentially shifting the center of gravity in the AI race over time.
What’s Next?
The next phase is likely to focus on grid buildout and market reforms to improve utilization, since rapid renewables deployment can overwhelm transmission and increase curtailment. Watch policy signals tied to the 15th Five-Year Plan through 2030, especially measures that expand transmission, storage, and pricing mechanisms to better integrate wind and solar. Also watch how China manages the coal fleet: new capacity additions alongside falling utilization point to a growing tension between reliability planning and economic efficiency that will shape future capital allocation across the power complex.














