“We’ll introduce new measures to eliminate curtailment in 2015,” said Zhu Ming, deputy director of the National Energy Administration (NEA) in his opening remarks to China Wind Power 2014 in Beijing.
Zhu did not say precisely what kind of curtailment-busting measures the NEA — an entity under China's powerful National Development & Reform Commission (NDRC) — might have up its sleeve.
China’s curtailment rate — the amount of wind-generated electricity not reaching the grid due to the prioritisation of other energy resources — dropped to 8.5%