Home> In Focus>Specials>Five Years Forward:The Transcendent Journey of China SOEs>Visual Chronicle

Central SOEs Offer Chinese Solutions for Energy Transition

Updated: December 16, 2025

China’s central state-owned enterprises (SOEs) are using innovative practices to construct green energy transmission lines nationwide, connecting the Gobi Desert in the west to eastern metropolises, integrating traditional energy bases with new-type energy systems, accelerating the clean and low-carbon transformation of the country’s energy structure, and injecting strong and sustained green momentum into the high-quality development of China's economy.

图片1.png

Constructed by China Longyuan Power Group Corporation Limited, a subsidiary of China Energy Investment Corporation Co., Ltd., a 1,616-kilometer transmission line delivers green electricity from the photovoltaic power area in the Tengger Desert, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, to Central China’s Hunan Province. [Photo/sasac.gov.cn]

图片2.png

The world's largest clean energy corridor built by China Three Gorges Corporation, consisting of six cascade hydropower stations including Wudongde and Baihetan, achieves efficient power generation through the joint operation system of the six reservoirs. [Photo/sasac.gov.cn]

图片3.png

The world's largest 26 MW offshore wind turbine developed by Dongfang Electric Corporation is successfully installed, setting new global records in both unit capacity and impeller diameter of installed wind turbines. [Photo/sasac.gov.cn]

图片4.png

The cumulative supply of electricity to the grid by China General Nuclear Power Corporation’s Daya Bay Nuclear Power Site has exceeded 1 trillion kWh. [Photo/sasac.gov.cn]

图片5.png

China National Offshore Oil Corporation contributes over 54 million kWh of electricity to Weizhou Island annually, contributing to a healthy ecological foundation of this “Most Beautiful Island.” [Photo/sasac.gov.cn]

图片6.png

The Yake Photovoltaic Power Station constructed by China Construction Second Engineering Bureau Ltd. in Hongyuan County, Aba Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Southwest China's Sichuan Province, integrates photovoltaic power with animal husbandry. It generates 450 million kWh of electricity annually while offering a sustainable income-increasing path for plateau herdsmen. [Photo/sasac.gov.cn]



(Executive editor: Yuan Ting)