How China
Powers Its Electric Cars and High-Speed Trains
Energy Generation and Transmission
·
China has built 42 ultrahigh-voltage
(UHV) power lines, including one stretching over 2,000 miles from Xinjiang
to Anhui Province.
·
These lines transmit electricity from
solar and wind farms in the west to densely populated eastern cities like
Shanghai, Hangzhou, and Nanjing.
·
UHV lines use direct current (DC)
technology, minimizing transmission losses over long distances.
Electrification of Transport
·
50% of new cars sold in China
are electric.
·
China operates 30,000 miles of
high-speed rail, all powered by electricity.
·
This surge in electrification has
created a massive demand for clean energy.
Clean Energy Milestones
·
In April, wind and solar provided
over 25% of China’s electricity.
·
China tripled its wind and solar
capacity six years ahead of its 2030 target.
·
However, 10% of renewable capacity
has gone unused due to grid limitations.
Grid Expansion and Planning
·
China is building the world’s first
nationwide UHV grid to address regional energy imbalances.
·
By 2050, it plans to triple the
number of UHV routes.
·
The State Grid Corporation
was caught off guard by the rapid growth in renewables.
Global Comparison
·
China’s UHV lines operate at 800–1,100
kilovolts, far exceeding U.S. lines (mostly 500–765 kilovolts).
·
The U.S. faces permitting delays
and local opposition, while China benefits from top-down planning and
limited public dissent.
Environmental Impact
·
UHV lines have helped reduce coal
dependence, especially in cities like Beijing.
·
A 41% drop in air pollution
since 2014 has added nearly two years to average life expectancy.
·
Despite progress, China still uses
more coal than the rest of the world combined.
Local Concerns and Risks
·
Residents near UHV lines report electric
shocks and sparks during rain.
·
Villagers in Anhui express concerns
about safety and tourism, but accept the lines as national priorities.
·
The grid’s vulnerability includes
flood-prone and earthquake-prone terrain in the northwest.
[ABS
News Service/11.10.2025]
In China, the longest ultrahigh-voltage
power line stretches more than 2,000 miles from the far northwest to the populous
southeast — the equivalent of transmitting electricity from Idaho to New York City.

The power line starts in a remote desert
in northwest China, where vast arrays of solar panels and wind turbines generate
electricity on a monumental scale. It snakes southeast, following an ancient river
between mountain ranges before reaching Anhui Province near Shanghai, home to 61
million people and some of China’s most successful electric car and robot manufacturers.
That’s a single power line. China has 41
others. Each is capable of carrying more electricity than any utility transmission
line in the United States. That’s partly because China is using technology that
makes its lines far more efficient than almost anywhere else in the world. The feat
is owed to China’s ambitious national energy policies and the fact that few residents
along the path of these lines dare object — even though the lines cause small electric
shocks that local people said they could feel when holding a metal fishing pole.
“As long as you don’t fish directly underneath
the wires and keep the fishing line from getting tangled in the wires, it’s basically
fine,” Shu Jie, an air-conditioning repairman, said matter-of-factly, showing off
a six-inch fish he had just caught.
China’s aggressive embrace
of clean energy technologies, at a faster pace than even its own government expected
or planned, has left it with an unquenchable thirst for electricity. Half the country’s
new cars are battery-powered, and the 30,000 miles of high-speed rail lines run
on electricity. Wind and solar energy provided over a quarter of China’s power in
April, a milestone that few other countries can brag about.
But much of that clean energy is produced in the
country’s sunny, windy western and northern regions,
far from most of its people and factories. More than 90 percent of China’s 1.4 billion
people live in the east, where cloudy days, windless nights and sluggish rivers
limit the potential for clean energy. So to move the electricity
to where it is needed most, China is urgently upgrading its power grid.
Beijing’s central planners, having underestimated
the country’s swift adoption of solar and wind energy, are building the world’s
first nationwide grid of ultrahigh-voltage power transmission lines.
Beijing’s expansion of its power grid contrasts
sharply with President Trump’s “Drill, baby, drill”
approach of doubling down on fossil fuels and rolling back federal programs to spur
greater use of clean energy.
In July, the Energy Department terminated
its commitment to provide a $4.9 billion loan guarantee for construction of the
Grain Belt Express power line to take wind power from Kansas to cities in Illinois
and Indiana. That 800-mile ultrahigh-voltage line, which would have covered a shorter
distance than dozens of lines already built in China, ran into criticism from rural
landowners and Republican lawmakers.
Even before Mr. Trump took office, other
renewable energy projects in the United States had to wait as long as 17 years for
permits to be approved for transmission lines running a few hundred miles.
Many of China’s ultrahigh-voltage lines
use direct current technology, which allows them to carry electricity for long distances
with barely any of the transmission losses that affect most high-power lines in
other countries.
China’s more efficient power lines have
broad consequences for the global race against climate change. They will help determine
how quickly China can reduce its world-leading use of coal, a stain on the country’s
clean energy track record. China uses as much coal as the entire rest of the world,
and emits more greenhouse gases
than the United States and the European Union combined.
The more advanced power grid is starting
to address a central problem facing China’s energy planners. In its western regions,
where the weather is favorable for solar, wind and hydroelectric
power, China produces more renewable energy than it can use.
Xi Jinping, China’s top leader, set a goal
in 2020 of tripling the country’s capacity to generate wind and solar energy by
2030. The country reached that mark last year — six years ahead of schedule.
The country’s government-owned electricity
transmission giant, State Grid, was caught unprepared.
“State Grid is good at building things,
but not six years ahead,” said David Fishman, an electricity consultant in Shanghai.
In some recent months, a tenth of China’s
wind and solar capacity has gone unused partly because the grid was unable to move
all the power generated.
“To improve the power system’s ability
to absorb new energy, we must accelerate the construction of power grid projects
supporting new energy,” Du Zhongming, electricity director
of the National Energy Administration in China, said at a news conference last year.
China already consumes twice as much electricity
as the United States. By 2050, China plans to triple its count of ultrahigh-voltage
routes.
The most recent public Chinese data, from
the end of 2024, showed 19 lines transmitting power at 800 kilovolts. Another 22
lines operated at 1,000 kilovolts. One of them, the behemoth terminating in Guquan, transmits enough electricity at 1,100 kilovolts to power
more than seven million American households or 40 million to 50 million Chinese
households.
To put the scale of China’s power grid build out in perspective, consider that the United States
has a handful of 765-kilovolt lines and a few running at 500 kilovolts or less,
according to the Electric Power Research Institute, a nonprofit research group.
The 765-kilovolt lines together total about 2,000 miles — the length of a single
line across China.
The Soviet Union built a power line in
Central Asia that was designed to operate at 1,150 kilovolts. But it used less powerful
equipment and has not run at full tilt for decades.
The development of China’s ultrahigh-voltage
lines was given a push in 2009, during the global financial crisis. The central
government approved enormous investments in their construction to create jobs and
head off an economic slowdown. China’s leaders staked ambitious plans for electric
vehicles and high-speed rail lines around the same time.
In March 2011, the construction of ultrahigh-voltage
lines gained further momentum from the partial meltdown of three nuclear reactors
after an earthquake and tsunami in Fukushima, Japan. Beijing delayed many prospective
nuclear reactors, which had been planned near cities, and doubled down on transmission
lines from remote areas.
Construction of the power lines has helped
China reduce its emissions of toxic air pollution and greenhouse gases. A University
of Chicago analysis of satellite data, released in August, found that air pollution
in China had plunged 41 percent since 2014. That added almost two years to the country’s
average life expectancy.
Beijing, once notorious for smog, mostly
stopped burning coal for electricity in 2020 and now relies partly on wind power
delivered from hundreds of miles away.
China’s ultrahigh-voltage network has helped
the country limit its dependence on imported oil and natural gas, but it has also
created new vulnerabilities. Much of northwestern China, where many of the lines
are being built, is mountainous. As a result, lines had to be closely bunched as
they hug a single, flood-prone tributary of the Yellow River that passes between
earthquake-prone mountain ranges from Dunhuang to Lanzhou in Gansu Province.
For decades, countries have talked about
building power lines similar to China’s. They have found it difficult to persuade
people living along the routes to accept any high-power lines, much less ultrahigh-voltage
lines.
China can build faster because of its top-down
industrial planning, government control of information and intolerance for public
dissent.
Some villagers in Anhui Province living
near China’s longest ultrahigh-voltage line said they had reservations about the
line, although they did not try to stop its construction.
The line carries mostly solar and wind
energy, as well as some coal-fired power, from the Gurbantünggüt
Desert in Xinjiang. It helps supply electricity to big eastern Chinese cities like
Shanghai, Hangzhou and Nanjing.
Xu Shicai, a farm manager in Xuchong, a village next to lines that pass within 30 yards of
homes, expressed concern.
“When you hold an umbrella in the rain,
sparks will fly from it, and you’ll feel numb,” he said. “When fishing, it’s hard
to hold the pole under the wires, as your hands feel very numb.”
The village’s small fish pond lies directly
under the power lines. A “no fishing” sign has a cartoon of a skeleton being electrocuted
and a graphic photo of a badly burned man who was apparently electrocuted. But Mr.
Xu and other residents said that did not stop many villagers from fishing because
the pond was so close by.
Mr. Xu said he accepted the power line
because it was an important national project, but he worried it might scare off
visitors. “I’m used to it now,” he said. “But honestly, we don’t want more lines
built here.”