New energy refers to renewable energy and new forms of energy other than traditional fossil energy, including solar energy, wind energy, hydropower, biomass energy, geothermal energy and hydrogen energy. Solar energy is converted into electricity through photovoltaic panels, which are used in photovoltaic power stations and household systems; wind energy is captured by wind turbines to generate electricity, and the scale of offshore and onshore wind farms is constantly expanding; and hydrogen energy, as a clean energy source, has a bright future in the field of fuel cell vehicles. These energy sources are clean, environmentally friendly and sustainable, and can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and environmental pollution. Driven by the global energy transition and the ‘dual-carbon’ goal, new energy has become the key to solving the energy crisis and achieving sustainable development, and is of far-reaching significance in promoting industrial upgrading and optimising the energy structure.
New energy
New energy refers to renewable energy and new forms of energy other than traditional fossil energy, including solar energy, wind energy, hydropower, biomass energy, geothermal energy and hydrogen energy. Solar energy is converted into electricity through photovoltaic panels, which are used in photovoltaic power stations and household systems; wind energy is captured by wind turbines to generate electricity, and the scale of offshore and onshore wind farms is constantly expanding; and hydrogen energy, as a clean energy source, has a bright future in the field of fuel cell vehicles. These energy sources are clean, environmentally friendly and sustainable, and can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and environmental pollution. Driven by the global energy transition and the ‘dual-carbon’ goal, new energy has become the key to solving the energy crisis and achieving sustainable development, and is of far-reaching significance in promoting industrial upgrading and optimising the energy structure.