Monday, July 06, 2026

How China’s Renewable Technology Benefits The West – OpEd



Western Tariffs Hurt Green Goals — US/EU restrictions on Chinese solar, EVs, and batteries slow the global renewable transition and raise costs.

China Dominates Renewables — China leads in manufacturing capacity and price reduction for solar, wind, and batteries, adding more renewable power than the rest of the world combined.

Cooperation Beats Confrontation — Engaging China on green tech would accelerate decarbonization and innovation; protectionism harms the West’s own climate and economic interests.

The current heat wave in Europe and North America is seen by scientists as evidence of the accelerating impact of climate change. With temperatures across a wide swath of eastern U.S. and northern Europe topping historical highs and the heat domes persisting beyond normal time trends, an unprecedented number of the public – several hundred million people – are suffering from their government’s failure to prioritise a more rapid transition to renewable and clean energy technology in their national development.

Missing or lost amidst the furore generated by the mounting heat related deaths and other impact caused by the heat wave and the search for relief from a weather phenomenon that is likely to become more frequent and widespread is the war that the West is waging on the renewable technology front against China.

This policy war has been intensifying with an emphasis on actively “de-risking” and protecting domestic markets from what is being sold to the western public as “China Shock 2.0” .


Key strategies in this war for now include high tariffs, strict procurement rules, and supply chain security bans targeting electric vehicles, batteries, solar panels, and inverters.

United States Initiatives

Targeted Inverter Bans: The U.S. is currently drafting regulations to restrict the import of Chinese energy inverters, citing national security threats to electrical grids.National Defense

Restrictions: The U.S. updated the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) to prohibit the Department of Defense from procuring solar equipment and inverters manufactured by Chinese entities of concern.

Heavy Tariffs: The U.S. continues to enforce major Section 301 tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, batteries, solar cells, steel, and aluminum.
European Union Initiatives

Trade Defense Instruments: The EU is heavily utilizing anti-dumping investigations and countervailing duties against Chinese electric vehicles, steel, and industrial manufacturing.

Industrial Accelerator Act: The EU has proposed the Industrial Accelerator Act, which prioritizes EU-made clean-tech and low-carbon products in projects that use public funds, aiming to reduce reliance on third-country supply chains .

G7 Alignment: European leaders and the G7 bloc have collectively agreed to map and reduce critical mineral dependencies.

Next On The Renewable Technology War Front

Western nations are currently implementing tariffs, stricter local content requirements, and anti-subsidy investigations on Chinese solar panels, EVs, and batteries. The primary stated goals are to protect domestic manufacturing and address concerns about China’s alleged overcapacity. As these barriers increase the cost of imported equipment, they will raise upfront prices for consumers and slow down the adoption rate of renewable and clean technology,

The uncomfortable and indisputable reality the West should accept is that China is a market leader and perhaps even a role model for the West in renewable energy. Hence, it is counter productive on the energy and climate change fronts to fight rather than work with China. The other reality is that China’s scaling of renewable energy manufacturing has created significant price efficiencies – solar panel prices declined by 89% between 2010-2023 largely due to Chinese production scale. This price effect has accelerated global, including western, adoption of renewable technology.

China’s New Long March In Development


China’s “New Long March” – a phrase frequently invoked by Chinese leadership – can be seen also to be referencing the nation’s coordinated, state-driven pivot away from cheap, scale-led manufacturing toward technological self-reliance, green and clean energy adoption, and industrial modernization.

​This transition has been responded to by the West through a lens of intense geopolitical friction, treating it as a zero-sum conflict. In the past, opposition to China was justified on security, human rights, labour concerns and other governance related grounds.

This strategy no longer works. When reapplied to the renewable energy front, it misjudges how the global and Chinese economy works. If structured and integrated constructively, China’s economic and technological evolution including in the green revolution can yield massive dividends for the West and the rest of the world.
​Areas of Mutual Benefit

​The global community stands to gain significantly from China’s upgraded industrial model, provided both sides maintain open economic pipelines free of the ideological battles that Western leaders have foisted on the world.

The clearest example for now is the demand by Western consumers for Chinese air conditioners and other cooling appliances during this heat wave episode. This is a policy lesson for critics attempting to justify restrictions on Chinese imports on the basis of the reflexive and protectionist ‘overcapacity’ charge regularly trotted out by senior European lawmakers and politicians.

​1. Accelerating the Global Green Transition


​China has essentially built the supply-chain backbone for the world’s decarbonization efforts. In recent years, its expansion in renewable energy capacity has been unprecedented, adding more solar and wind power than almost the rest of the world combined.

​The Benefit: By leveraging China’s massive manufacturing efficiencies in electric vehicles (EVs), lithium-ion batteries, and solar photovoltaics, Western countries can dramatically lower the capital cost of hitting their own net-zero climate goals.

​2. Driving Global Scientific Breakthroughs

​China’s 15th Five-Year Plan (2026–2030) centers on foundational research, artificial intelligence, and frontier sciences. According to trackers from groups like the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, China now leads global research output in a vast majority of critical technologies.

​The Benefit: Rather than treating scientific advancement as a closed loop, encouraging academic transparency and cross-border scientific collaboration allows Western researchers and corporations to build upon these foundational breakthroughs. This speeds up global innovation cycles that can help in mitigating the impact of climate change.

​3. Stabilizing Global Supply Chains


​The upgraded version of China’s economic model focuses heavily on industrial resilience and preventing catastrophic bottlenecks.

​The Benefit: A highly organized, high-tech manufacturing sector reduces the risk of global supply chain shocks. While the West is actively “de-risking” or friend-shoring critical components, a robust, highly productive Chinese industrial base keeps a floor under global manufacturing capacity, curbing long-term inflationary pressures.

​How the West Can Encourage a Productive Outcome


​For China’s “New Long March” to benefit everyone, the global response needs to shift from purely defensive isolation and protectionism to engagement and partnership. An emphasis on actively “de-risking” and protecting domestic markets from a perceived “China Shock 2.0” will only hurt the West or other countries attempting similar policy measures..

“At what cost” the conundrum frequently used to describe and criticise China’s development is one that the West needs to apply to itself in this and many more of the ways that it approaches the challenges of our time.

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About Lim Teck Ghee

Lim Teck Ghee PhD is a Malaysian economic historian, policy analyst and public intellectual whose career has straddled academia, civil society organisations and international development agencies. He has a regular column, Another Take, in The Sun, a Malaysian daily; and is author of Challenging the Status Quo in Malaysia.
View all posts by Lim Teck Ghee →

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