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China sets 2030 clean tech targets in five-year plan

Chinaโ€™s 2026 five-year plans set binding 2030 targets: 40% non-fossil power, 30% cuts in steel/cement emissions, and boosted domestic lithium, cobalt, and rare earths production. The plans lock in Chi

China Briefing 25 June 2026: Five-year plans passed | Critical-mineral tensions | Industrial decarbonisation plan
Carbon Brief โ€” 25 June 2026
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China has approved its latest five-year plans, setting aggressive targets for clean energy, critical mineral security, and industrial decarbonization.

Read Full Story at Carbon Brief โ†’
โšก Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context โ€” not sourced from the article above

Why This Matters

Chinaโ€™s latest five-year plan signals more than domestic policyโ€”it redefines global industrial benchmarks. By locking in aggressive decarbonization targets and tightening control over critical minerals, Beijing is reshaping supply chains while forcing competitors to adapt. The planโ€™s binding nature suggests Beijing is prioritizing long-term strategic dominance over short-term economic flexibility, a shift that could accelerate technological bifurcation in energy and manufacturing.

Background Context

Chinaโ€™s five-year planning system has historically been the cornerstone of its state-led economic model, but this iteration arrives amid unprecedented pressure. The 2026 plan builds on earlier decarbonization efforts that were often undermined by local protectionism and industrial overcapacity, while the push to dominate critical minerals reflects lessons learned from past supply chain vulnerabilitiesโ€”like the 2023 cobalt shortages that disrupted battery production across Europe.

What Happens Next

Watch for how provinces interpret the 30% emissions cuts for steel and cementโ€”some may resort to carbon-intensive trade-offs, while others could pioneer breakthroughs in green hydrogen or alternative clinker processes. The lithium, cobalt, and rare earths targets will likely trigger a wave of state-backed mining expansions, but the real test will be whether domestic production can meet soaring demand without triggering new geopolitical flashpoints, particularly with the EU and U.S. racing to secure their own supplies.

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