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China Leads Global Coal Power Surge as Capacity Climbs to Record

Global coal-power capacity rose to a record last year, led by a surge in new plants in China and a slowdown in retirements around the world, according to a new report from Global Energy Monitor.

India , Indonesia , Beijing , China , Qi-qin , Centre-for-research-on-energy , Clean-air , Dirtiest-fossil-fuel , Long-goodbye ,

China Leads Global Coal Power Surge as Capacity Hits Record

(Bloomberg) -- Global coal-power capacity rose to a record last year, led by a surge in new plants in China and a slowdown in retirements around the world, according to a new report from Global Energy Monitor. Most Read from BloombergUS Sees Imminent Missile Strike on Israel by Iran, ProxiesUS Slams Strikes on Russia Oil Refineries as Risk to Oil MarketsUS Inflation Refuses to Bend, Fanning Fears It Will StickChinese Cement Maker Halted After 99% Crash in 15 MinutesS&P 500 Hit by Fed-Pivot Rethi

Beijing , China , Peru , Canberra , Australian-capital-territory , Australia , Indonesia , Shanghai , India , Chinese , Australian , Qi-qin

China's Coal Price Slump Likely to Persist Until Start of Summer

China's Coal Price Slump Likely to Persist Until Start of Summer
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California , United-states , China , Beijing , Hong-kong , Shanghai , Russia , Fenwei , Zhejiang , Ukraine , Chinese , Joe-biden

Coal's peak is here but it's not going away soon

Total consumption of coal will reach a record high of more than 8.5 billion metric tons this year, and then start a long, slow decline, according to the International Energy Agency. Demand is expected to slide to 8.3 billion tons by 2026, the agency said in its Coal 2023 report issued Friday.

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