David Fickling, Columnist

Coal’s Last Refuge Crumbles With China’s Renewables Plan

Beijing’s latest energy policy will sharply increase wind and solar, but can’t save the climate on its own.

Solar panels being installed on a rooftop in Wuhan.

Photographer: Kevin Frayer/Getty

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Coal-fired power has been dying everywhere except where it poses the greatest threat.

Draw a line down the world around the longitude of the Nile. The region to the west — encompassing Europe, Africa and the Americas — has seen coal consumption drop by a quarter over the past decade. In the U.S., demand fell 43% on an energy-equivalent basis between 2009 and 2019, according to BP Plc’s latest statistical review of energy. In Europe, it slipped 23%. The U.K., cradle of the coal-fired industrial revolution, saw a 79% decline that has left its few remaining thermal plants barely operating since spring.