New green capacity push, China Resources Power’s Shanxi new energy base expands its reach
16.06.2026 - 08:04:46 | ad-hoc-news.deEdited by ad hoc news New Releases & Launches Desk. Reviewed before publication on 06/16/2026 at 2:06 AM ET. Details in the imprint.
China Resources Power is accelerating its renewables build-out with the large-scale Shanxi new energy base, a multi-project cluster combining wind and photovoltaic power in one of China’s core coal provinces. The company is adding gigawatt-level capacity under China’s national policy of integrating new energy with the existing power system, positioning the base as a key source of green electricity for North China’s grid.
How the Shanxi new energy base is structured and what it delivers
At the heart of the initiative is a portfolio of grid-connected wind farms and solar parks in Shanxi that form part of China Resources Power’s broader “integrated wind-photovoltaic base” strategy across several provinces, with individual bases typically planned in the 1 GW to multi-gigawatt range for combined capacity. According to the group’s official description of its clean energy layout, these integrated bases are designed to leverage high-quality wind and solar resources in northern and northwestern regions while feeding power into load centers via ultra-high-voltage transmission lines as outlined on China Resources Power’s clean energy business page. Within this framework, the Shanxi base bundles multiple approved projects, typically including onshore wind turbines in the 3 MW to 6 MW class and large-scale PV arrays connected at 110 kV or above, to achieve economies of scale in construction and grid access.
While project-level numbers vary by phase, China Resources Power discloses that its consolidated wind and solar portfolio has been expanding rapidly, with newly commissioned capacity in recent years heavily skewed toward new energy rather than coal, and the Shanxi cluster is one of the focal points in this shift. The company emphasizes that these bases are developed under China’s “integration of source-grid-load-storage” concept, meaning that generation is increasingly paired with flexible grid infrastructure and, where feasible, energy storage to improve utilization of variable renewables in areas that historically relied on coal-fired plants. This setup allows the Shanxi base to contribute not only raw megawatt-hours but also more stable output profiles, which is critical as renewable penetration rises in North China’s power system.
Beyond pure generation, the Shanxi new energy base is closely tied to China Resources Power’s broader decarbonization and transformation roadmap, which targets a rising share of non-fossil generation capacity over the medium term. In its environmental, social and governance disclosures, the company highlights rapid growth in installed wind and solar capacity and notes that incremental investments are concentrated in new energy, while coal projects are largely focused on efficiency upgrades and ultra-low emission retrofits rather than greenfield builds according to the group’s sustainability reporting on environmental protection. For Shanxi specifically, this means the base is also a demonstration of how a coal-heavy province can host a growing share of renewables, supporting regional air-quality improvements and national carbon peaking and neutrality timelines, even as legacy thermal capacity still underpins grid stability.
Strategically, the Shanxi new energy base fits into a wider network of China Resources Power projects that span wind, solar, hydropower and, increasingly, integrated energy service offerings to industrial parks and urban districts. The company reports that its clean energy business has become an important growth engine, contributing a rising proportion of total installed capacity and power generation compared with traditional thermal assets, and large bases such as Shanxi are central to keeping that momentum. For investors and policymakers, the cluster illustrates how a major Chinese utility is executing on national guidance to build large-scale wind and solar hubs in resource-rich regions and transmit the output into demand centers, reinforcing the narrative that state-linked power producers are pivoting progressively toward low-carbon portfolios even as they manage the dual goals of energy security and emissions reduction.
Within China Resources Power’s portfolio, the Shanxi new energy base underscores the company’s transition toward integrated clean energy platforms that can support China’s long-term climate goals while maintaining reliable power supply in industrial heartlands. China Resources Power’s shares (HK0000000452) last traded on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange at HKD 18.14 on 06/13/2026, reflecting the market’s assessment of its ongoing shift from coal-centric generation to a more balanced mix with a growing share of wind and solar capacity based on Hong Kong stock exchange data.
Shanxi new energy base in brief: the hard facts
- Product: Shanxi new energy base (wind and solar cluster)
- Manufacturer: China Resources Power Holdings Company Limited
- Category: New Release/Launch - large-scale renewable power base
- Launch date: Phased commissioning in recent years as part of China’s integrated wind-photovoltaic bases
- MSRP / Price: Not applicable (utility-scale generation asset)
- Availability: Operational and under construction in Shanxi province, supplying power to the regional and national grid
- Target audience: Grid operators, industrial off-takers, policymakers and institutional investors
- Key differentiator / USP: Integrated, multi-project wind and solar cluster supporting decarbonization in a coal-centric province
More background on China Resources Power
Further company news and context around China Resources Power’s strategy and project pipeline can be found via the issuer’s own channels and financial market coverage.
More China Resources Power coverage Investor RelationsThis article was a.i.-assisted and editorially reviewed. Product information without warranty; prices and availability may change at short notice. Not investment advice and not a buy or sell recommendation. Trading involves risk up to and including the total loss of invested capital.
