Carbon News
  • Members
    • Login
      Forgot Password?
    • Not a member? Subscribe
    • Forgot Password
      Back to Login
    • Not a member? Subscribe
  • Home
  • New Zealand
    • Politics
    • Energy
    • Agriculture
    • Carbon emissions
    • Transport
    • Forestry
    • Business
  • Markets
    • Analysis
    • NZ carbon price
  • International
    • Australia
    • United States
    • China
    • Europe
    • United Kingdom
    • Canada
    • Asia
    • Pacific
    • Antarctic/Arctic
    • Africa
    • South America
    • United Nations
  • News Direct
    • Media releases
    • Climate calendar
  • About Carbon News
    • Contact us
    • Advertising
    • Subscribe
    • Service
    • Policies

Taiwan diary: Renewable energy 101

29 Mar 2023


Yi-Ting Lu and Ching-Wen Huang both started out as activists in Taiwan’s environmental movement.

Now they spend their working days on the 37th floor of Taipei 101 - the 508 metre tall tower that houses a who’s who of multinational corporations.

 

They are associates at the Renewable Consulting Group - a key player in facilitating investment in offshore wind farms in Taiwan.

 

The views from the tower block are extraordinary - but an ever-present soupy haze is a reminder that reducing emissions is not the only reason that the young are pinning their hopes on a rapid transition to renewables.

 

Ching-Wen Huang (left) and Yi-Ting Lu

 

Huang, who joined the firm in 2019, says the uptake of wind generation has been among the most rapid in the Asia Pacific market.

 

There's approximately a gigawatt of offshore wind already operating and another 5.5 GW in the pipeline.

 

Taiwan’s Bureau of Energy has begun a series of auctions for the supply of 3 GW of offshore energy with the final auction due to take place next year.

 

The auctions will see 1.5 GW of energy added to the grid each year between 2026 to 2031.

 

All going to plan Taiwan will reach 14.7 GW of installed offshore wind capacity by 2031, surpassing both Japan and South Korea.

 

Companies bidding for the wind generation are required to meet a localisation requirement. Wind farms that come into operation in the 2026/27 period must source 60% of goods and services locally with the percentage going up over time.

 

There is also government support for R & D carried by locally companies.

 

Solar is next off the rank in the race to a fully renewable electricity sector. The government has set a target of 20 GW by 2025. Currently there is about 8 GW in place.

 

Huang says there is limited land available for solar farms and initial plans that would have seen forestry and farm land used for solar panels came in for stiff opposition.

 

Now the target is for 12 GW of that 20 GW target being met with rooftop solar.

 

Geothermal power is also being explored. Taiwan Power set up a geothermal power plant in 1981 but shut it due to corrrosion in 1993.

 

Yi-Ting Lu says geothermal energy development is still in the very early stages - with just one privately owned generator currently. 

 

But meeting the net zero 2050 target is going to require utilising every possible renewable energy source available.

 

Lu, who is finishing up a three year stint on the board of Taiwan Youth Climate Coalition, says NGOs and climate activists are generally supportive of the government’s efforts to reduce emissions but feel it isn’t doing enough on the adaptation and just transition side of the equation.

 

“They want the government to be more ambitious.”

 

Huang says the giant semiconductor company TSMC is both Taiwan’s single biggest energy user and part of the solution to mitigating climate change.

 

Most of the digital technologies being developed to help people and companies make smarter decisions on how they consume energy depend on state of the art semiconductors and TSMC is by far the largest producer of them globally.

 

As a former protester and former climate change adviser at KPMG he’s come to the opinion that corporate pressure is the main driver of change at companies like TSMC.

 

But the pressure from corporates, like Apple, is often as the result of pressure from the public and activist groups like Greenpeache.

 

“I know a lot of people say the work done by the likes of KPMG is greenwashing and I joined the renewable industry because I wanted to be involved in something real. But corporate procurement power is driving change.

 

“Companies supplying corporates like Apple need to secure a renewable energy supply.”

 

Lu agrees. She says in her experience governments are slower to respond to lobbying by people power than multi-nationals. It's Apple that has forced TSCM to start puchasing renewable energy not the government.

 

................................

 

Jeremy Rose is currently in Taiwan and travelled there with assistance from the Asia New Zealand Foundation.

 

Taiwan diary: Getting there

Taiwan diary: Bicycle Kingdom

Taiwan diary: Fast trains, slow bikes and silent scooters

Taiwan diary: The activist

print this story


Story copyright © Carbon News 2023

Related Topics:   Energy

More >
Asia
More >

Declared a terrorist for bringing renewable power to Philippine communities

Mon 2 Feb 2026

Accusing activists of having links to terrorism has led to non-profit funds being frozen and local climate projects being delayed or scrapped.

EU-India trade deal leaves bloc's carbon border tariff intact

29 Jan 2026

A landmark trade deal struck by India and the European Union on Tuesday will not trigger any changes to the bloc's carbon border tariff, EU officials said, despite India's concerns over the scheme.

Indonesia’s massive captive coal plans are putting climate targets and economy at risk: study

28 Jan 2026

Operational and planned industrial coal capacity to fuel the nickel boom has tripled since 2023, surpassed Australia’s entire coal fleet and is nearing Germany’s total, raising concerns over emissions and long-term competitiveness.

‘Not normal’: Climate crisis supercharged deadly monsoon floods in Asia

12 Dec 2025

Cyclones like those in Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Malaysia that killed 1,750 are ‘alarming new reality’.

Philippines tests ‘transition credits’ to cut coal use in novel experiment

12 Dec 2025

The Philippines is testing a new type of carbon credit aimed at encouraging companies to cut their climate warming emissions.

India at COP30: A mismatch between grandstanding and climate action

11 Dec 2025

Despite India’s attempt to anoint itself as the leader of the developing world, at the COP30 summit, New Delhi’s track record remains contradictory.

Politicians in South-East Asia ignore climate change at their own political peril

9 Dec 2025

Anger and frustration are growing in devastated communities, as governments botch their response to the climate crisis.

Asia flood death toll surpasses 1,500 as calls grow to fight deforestation

8 Dec 2025

The death toll from last week’s catastrophic floods and landslides in parts of Asia surged past 1,500 Thursday as rescue teams raced to reach survivors isolated by the disaster with hundreds of people still unaccounted for across the region.

Families on rooftops, homes buried by mud: Asia floods show water is overtaking wind as main threat

4 Dec 2025

The fallout marks a grim escalation in deadly weather across the region that has been aggravated by the blanket of carbon pollution heating the planet.

From COP30 to net zero by 2070: India insists on not billions but trillions to lead the global south

3 Dec 2025

At COP30 in Belém this November, New Delhi demanded that wealthy nations provide climate finance on the scale of not billions but trillions, while pressing for technology access that does not tether developing economies to costly licensing regimes.

Carbon News

Subscriptions, Advertising & General

[email protected]

Editorial

[email protected]

We welcome comments, news tips and suggestions - please also use this address to submit all media releases for News Direct).

Useful Links
Home About Carbon News Contact us Advertising Subscribe Service Policies
New Zealand
Politics Energy Agriculture Carbon emissions Transport Forestry Business
International
Australia United States China Europe United Kingdom Canada Asia Pacific Antarctic/Arctic Africa South America United Nations
Home
Markets
Analysis NZ carbon price
News Direct
Media releases Climate calendar

© 2008-2026 Carbon News. All Rights Reserved. • Your IP Address: 216.73.216.38 • User account: Sign In

Please wait...
Audit log: