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Nearly 70 percent of China’s foreign power investments from 2022 to 2023 were in renewables like solar and wind, surpassing fossil fuels for the first time since Beijing started backing power projects overseas in the early 2000s, according to a new analysis from the Global Development Policy (GDP) Center at Boston University (BU).

The shift highlights China’s increasing dominance in green energy technologies and the supply chains of critical minerals and metals that support them, reported Inside Climate News.

China’s overseas energy investments hit a record, with wind and solar making up the majority of spending for the first time.

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— Inside Climate News (@insideclimatenews.org) May 26, 2025 at 1:11 PM

“In September 2021, Chinese leader Xi Jinping pledged that China would stop financing new overseas coal-fired power plants and instead pledged to ramp up support for renewable energy projects,” a new policy brief by researchers from the BU GDP Center said. “This announcement marked an important shift in China’s global energy policy, with potential to fill the glaring gaps in the financing necessary for the energy transition in developing countries.”

The brief — No New Coal A Shift in the Composition of China’ s Overseas Power Plant Portfolio? — evaluates the implementation of the country’s 2021 pledge and offers a historical and recent overview of its overseas power plants’ carbon dioxide emissions, capacity, energy composition and investors, a press release from the BU GDP Center said.

An update to China’s Global Power Database, managed by the BU GDP Center, introduced new data on the country’s overseas power plant portfolio.

The authors of the brief found that the makeup of China’s overseas energy finance for development finance institutions and foreign direct development has shifted to 68 percent green energy. There have also been no new coal-fired power plant investments since 2021.

The findings are complicated, however, since the data shows a downward trend in total energy investments, and the overall stock is still heavily carbon intensive.

Coal plants that were in the pipeline before the country made its pledge “are still coming online and will emit carbon dioxide for decades going forward,” the researchers said, as Inside Climate News reported.

If those coal plants are finished, they will collectively emit annual carbon emissions equal to the country of Austria, the analysis said.

Wind turbine blades for export overseas at Sinoma (Funing) Wind Power Blade Co., Ltd. in Yancheng, Jiangsu Province of China on Nov. 18, 2023. VCG / VCG via Getty Images

Another factor tempering the shift toward financing renewables in China’s overseas portfolio is that the country’s overall foreign direct investment has fallen since its peak in 2016.

“This shift does not represent a significant ramp-up in renewables, as the scale of financing remains relatively small,” the researchers said.

Just three gigawatts of wind and solar capacity were funded in 2022 and 2023. In comparison, China’s total overseas power investments between 2013 and 2019 averaged 16 gigawatts of capacity.

“China’s global energy financing is increasingly aligned with the green transition, but coal may continue to represent a significant part of China’s overseas power portfolio as previously announced projects continue to come online. Still, initiatives such as the Green Investment and Finance Partnership (GIFP), announced at the 2023 Belt and Road Forum, hold the potential to advance sustainable development, helping developing countries achieve their green energy objectives,” the press release said.

The post China Invests More in Solar and Wind Than Coal Overseas for the First Time: Report appeared first on EcoWatch.

https://www.ecowatch.com/china-solar-wind-coal-overseas-investment.html

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Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Dandelion Energy CEO Dan Yates On How Geothermal Leasing Could Transform Home Heating and Cooling

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Return to one of our most compelling interviews of 2025. Amazingly, the same Congressional bill that gutted residential clean energy tax credits also led to a major breakthrough in financing home geothermal systems. Dan Yates, CEO of Dandelion Energy, explains how the Big, Beautiful Bill introduced changes that, for the first time, allow third-party leasing of residential geothermal systems. He shares why this policy change could help ground-source heat pumps grow the way leasing helped rooftop solar. Geothermal heating and cooling is four times more efficient than a furnace and twice as efficient as air-source heat pumps. Yet only about 1% of U.S. homes use it because the upfront costs for new geothermal systems have ranged from $20,000 to $31,000. The new leasing model means new homeowners can get geothermal systems for just $10 to $40 per month on a 20-year lease, which is usually far less than what they save on energy.

Dan Yates, CEO of Dandelion Energy, is our guest on Sustainability In Your Ear.
Dandelion is working with Lennar, one of the largest homebuilders in the country, to bring geothermal to more than 1,500 homes in Colorado over the next two years. This will be one of the biggest residential geothermal projects in U.S. history. The benefits for the power grid could be even more important than the savings for homeowners. Geothermal systems use only 25% of the peak power that air-source heat pumps need, which is a big advantage as AI data centers increase electricity demand. Yates explains that the Earth works like a huge thermal battery, storing heat in the summer for use in the winter. Geothermal lets utilities reduce peak loads on the grid throughout the year, freeing homeowners from the cost of the most expensive power.
You can learn more about Dandelion Energy at dandelionenergy.com.

Editor’s Note: This episode originally aired on December 29, 2025.

The post Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Dandelion Energy CEO Dan Yates On How Geothermal Leasing Could Transform Home Heating and Cooling appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/podcast/sustainability-in-your-ear-dandelion-energy-ceo-dan-yates-on-how-geothermal-leasing-could-transform-home-heating-and-cooling/

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56 Environmental Innovations in the 56 Years Since Earth Day Began

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The first Earth Day was celebrated on April 22, 1970 — 56 years ago — and, goodness, how the world has changed since then. We’ve come a long way since the days of burning our trash and pumping our gas guzzlers with leaded gasoline. In honor of those 56 years, here are 56 important changes and milestones since the first Earth Day.

Legislation

The U.S. government has led much of the environmental charge, starting with the implementation of the EPA (1) in July 1970. Later that year, the Clean Air Act (2) targeted air pollutants, followed by the Clean Water Act (3) in 1972 and the Endangered Species Act (4) in 1973.

Some lesser-known national laws included the Safe Water Drinking Act (5) in 1974, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (6) in 1976, the Toxic Substances Control Act (7) in 1976, the National Energy Act (8) in 1978, and the Medical Waste Tracking Act (9) in 1988.

In some cases, states have led the charge. Oregon passed the first bottle bill (10) in 1971, Minnesota’s Clean Indoor Air Act (11) was the first law to restrict smoking in public places (1975), and Massachusetts required low-flush toilets (12) for construction and remodeling in 1988.

Green Innovations: The Early Years

In order to comply with all the laws from the 1970s, we needed new technology to ensure consumers could adhere to the new standards. Consider:

  • The “Crying Indian” PSA debuts in 1971 (13)
  • Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) gets banned in 1972 (14)
  • The energy-efficient compact fluorescent light bulb launches in 1973 (15)
  • Cars begin displaying fuel economy labels in the mid-1970s (16)
  • In 1975, all cars are manufactured with catalytic converters to limit exhaust emissions (17)
  • Chlorofluorocarbons are banned from aerosol cans starting in 1978 (18)
  • The first curbside recycling program begins in New Jersey in 1980 (19)
  • In 1986, McDonald’s switches from foam to paper food containers (20)
  • Mercury is removed from latex paint in 1990, providing a viable alternative to banned lead paint (21)
  • Earth911 launches the first U.S. recycling directory in 1991 (22)
  • Energy Star certification debuts in 1992 for appliances and electronics (23)
  • The U.S. Green Building Council begins in 1993 (24)

The Political Movement

The Green Party (25) launched in 1984, which was just the beginning of green issues entering the mainstream. One Percent for the Planet (26) was founded in 2002 to challenge businesses to donate to environmental causes, and the ISO 14001 standard (27) established environmental management. Companies are now facing pressure to allow employee telecommuting (28).

Things really developed after the release of Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth (29) in 2006. NBC debuted Green Week (30) in 2007. Carbon offsets (31) alleviated corporate green guilt. Bisphenol A (32) made us all question plastic purchases. Hybrid vehicles (33) generated tax credits and gas savings. Plastic bag bans gave rise to a reusable bag (34) craze. Fracking (35) and the Dakota Access Pipeline (36) were two of the most hotly contested news stories of the decade, at least until the 2016 election.

Green Tech: The Next Wave

Smart house controller on tablet and happy family

In the past 10 years, emerging green tech has made eco-friendly a way of life, including:

  • LED light bulbs (37)
  • Portable solar panels on backpacks and watches (38)
  • Plant-based plastics (39)
  • Motion sensor lighting (40)
  • Faucets with automatic shut-off (41)
  • Low volatile organic compound (VOC) paint (42)
  • Recycled plastic clothing (43)
  • Ride-sharing mobile applications (44)
  • Natural cleaning products (45)
  • Biodiesel engine vehicles (46)
  • Food waste composting (47)
  • Portable air purifiers (48)
  • Europe’s Green Deal introduced global recyclables shipping regulations to reduce pollution in low-income nations (49)
  • Corporate borrowers headed toward $500 billion in bond financings for the renewables transition (50)
  • President Biden rejoins the Paris Climate Accord on his first day in office. (51)

The Latest Five: 2022–2026

The pace of innovation has not slowed. Five more milestones have reshaped the environmental landscape since that 51st Earth Day:

  • The Inflation Reduction Act (52), signed into law in August 2022, became the largest climate investment in U.S. history, directing roughly $370 billion toward clean energy tax credits, EV incentives, methane reduction, and domestic clean manufacturing. Analysts projected it will drive more than $4 trillion in cumulative capital investment over a decade and put the U.S. on track for a 40% emissions reduction by 2030. Sadly, many of its key provisions have been defunded or eliminated by the Trump Administration.
  • The Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (53), adopted by 188 governments in December 2022, set the most ambitious biodiversity protection commitment in history. Its headline “30×30” target calls for conserving 30% of the planet’s land, freshwater, and ocean areas by 2030, a goal that would require doubling current protected land coverage and quadrupling marine protections.
  • America’s first commercial direct air capture plant (54), opened by Heirloom Carbon Technologies in Tracy, California in November 2023, marked the arrival of atmospheric carbon removal at commercial scale on U.S. soil. The plant uses limestone to absorb CO₂ directly from the air, with the captured carbon injected into concrete for permanent storage. In May 2024, Climeworks activated the world’s largest direct air capture facility, the Mammoth plant in Iceland, with a design capacity to remove 36,000 tons of CO₂ per year.
  • Solid-state batteries (55), a next-generation alternative to conventional lithium-ion technology, moved from laboratory promise toward commercial reality between 2022 and 2026. Unlike liquid-electrolyte batteries, solid-state versions are less flammable, achieve higher energy density, and degrade more slowly. In early 2025, Mercedes-Benz began road-testing a prototype EV powered by a lithium-metal solid-state cell that extended driving range 25% over comparable liquid-battery models. Multiple automakers and cell manufacturers now target commercial production between 2027 and 2030.
  • Perovskite and tandem solar cells (56), a new photovoltaic technology that pairs conventional silicon with thin perovskite layers, pushed solar efficiency into territory once considered theoretical. By 2024, tandem cells in laboratory settings exceeded 34% efficiency — well above the roughly 22% ceiling of standard silicon panels only a few years ago. manufacturers in Asia and Europe began scaling pilot production lines. Because perovskite cells can be printed on flexible substrates, they open the door to solar surfaces on buildings, vehicles, and everyday objects that conventional panels cannot reach.

The past 56 years have been huge when it comes to saving the environment. Expect more to come, including a resurgent EV industry, nuclear fusion, regenerative agriculture, restorative forestry, and more, as costs and the cool factor improve.

Editor’s Note: Originally published on April 18, 2018, this article was most recently updated in April 2026.

The post 56 Environmental Innovations in the 56 Years Since Earth Day Began appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/eco-tech/eco-friendly-innovations/

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Earth911 Inspiration: Forests Are the Lungs of Our Land

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This week’s quotation is from Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd president of the United States: “A nation that destroys its soils destroys itself. Forests are the lungs of our land, purifying the air and giving fresh strength to our people.”

Earth911 inspiration posters: Post them and share your desire to help people think of the planet first, every day. Click the poster to get a larger image.

Forests are the lungs of our land ...

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