Let's talk about what's really powering global energy transitions. The world's largest CO2 emitter operates an energy infrastructure built fundamentally on coal—no way around it. Here's what the numbers show: roughly 56% of the planet's coal gets consumed in this region. Sounds massive? It is.
Now here's where it gets interesting. Everyone talks about the renewable energy boom and EV manufacturing acceleration. The narrative sounds clean, transformative even. But dig into the actual grid mix powering these facilities, and you hit a different reality. Coal plants are still the backbone fueling renewable panel production and battery manufacturing at scale. It's not a side story—it's the energy foundation beneath the entire operation.
The gap between what we're told and what physics actually shows us keeps widening. Marketing narratives move markets. Real-world energy systems move slower. And that matters when you're trying to understand global infrastructure transitions.
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ThatsNotARugPull
· 6h ago
This is just outrageous. The green energy narrative is all stories; the underlying support still comes from coal power...
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So basically, new energy battery factories are still fundamentally coal-driven, and the contrast is stark.
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Wait, 56% global coal? If this data is really that significant, then those ESG investment stories would be awkward.
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Reality and propaganda never match. Marketing makes money quickly, but energy transition is stuck due to physical laws.
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So true. The imagined clean energy transition is actually running on old coal power infrastructure...
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Alright, anyway, the infrastructure for green energy still relies on burning coal. To put it nicely, it's an "energy transition"; to be blunt, it's just a change of soup without changing the medicine.
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GateUser-44a00d6c
· 6h ago
Basically, the green energy narrative is just a business show, with coal power still supporting it behind the scenes.
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JustAnotherWallet
· 6h ago
Basically, it's still burning coal under green energy; this set of rhetoric has indeed fooled quite a few people.
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RugPullAlertBot
· 6h ago
Basically, it's a big irony, right? Using coal to produce "clean energy" panels.
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Rugpull幸存者
· 6h ago
Basically, it's a vicious cycle. The green energy industry itself still relies on coal power, which is the most ironic thing of all.
Let's talk about what's really powering global energy transitions. The world's largest CO2 emitter operates an energy infrastructure built fundamentally on coal—no way around it. Here's what the numbers show: roughly 56% of the planet's coal gets consumed in this region. Sounds massive? It is.
Now here's where it gets interesting. Everyone talks about the renewable energy boom and EV manufacturing acceleration. The narrative sounds clean, transformative even. But dig into the actual grid mix powering these facilities, and you hit a different reality. Coal plants are still the backbone fueling renewable panel production and battery manufacturing at scale. It's not a side story—it's the energy foundation beneath the entire operation.
The gap between what we're told and what physics actually shows us keeps widening. Marketing narratives move markets. Real-world energy systems move slower. And that matters when you're trying to understand global infrastructure transitions.