| Chinese PV Industry Brief: Inner Mongolia launches 16 GW renewables project 
 Inner  Mongolia has started building a 16 GW ultra-high-voltage energy base  combining solar, wind, coal, and 5 GWh of storage to supply 36 TWh per  year to northern China.
 
 October 10, 2025                                              Vincent Shaw
 
 
   Inner Mongolia, China
 
 Image: Svdmole, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0
 
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 Inner Mongolia  has launched construction on its first ultra-high-voltage (UHV)  transmission energy base with a capacity exceeding 16 GW. The project,  located in the central-northern part of the Kubuqi Desert, represents a  total investment of CNY 98.8 bn (USD 13.59 bn). It will comprise 8 GW of  solar power, 4 GW of wind, 4 GW of supporting coal-fired capacity, and 5  GWh of new energy storage. A dedicated ±800 kV UHV transmission line,  stretching 699 km, will be built to deliver power to Cangzhou in Hebei  province, with a transmission capacity of 8 GW. The project is expected  to be completed and operational by the end of 2027. Once in operation,  it will transmit around 36 TWh of electricity annually to the North  China grid centered on the Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei region, of which  renewables will account for 60 per cent. The project is estimated to cut  standard coal consumption by roughly 6.4 million tonnes per year and  reduce carbon emissions by 16 million tonnes annually.
 
 Trina Storage recently announced the signing of a  strategic memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Japan’s Yuasa Shoji Co.  for large-scale energy storage cooperation. Under the agreement, the  two sides will jointly supply a total of 500 MWh of large-scale energy  storage systems to the Japanese market starting in 2025. Trina said the  partnership will accelerate its business expansion in Japan, leveraging  its technological expertise and integration capabilities across the full  value chain—from battery cells and battery energy storage systems  (BESS) to AC-side solutions—while ensuring high standards of safety,  reliability, and cost efficiency.
 
 Xiamen Hithium Energy Storage may resume its Hong  Kong initial public offering within the next three months after its  previous application lapsed earlier this year. The company said its  March IPO filing expired at the end of September as the process was not  completed within six months—a common occurrence for first-time  applicants rather than a sign of failure. Sources told Chinese media  that HiTHIUM plans to restart its Hong Kong listing by the end of this  year to raise funds for its global expansion and to accelerate growth in  its energy storage systems business
 
 pv-magazine.com
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