Letter from China: Energy security ambitions get a wake-up call
Widespread energy and electricity shortages over the past two months amid exceptionally cold weather serve as a bruising reality check
Beijing’s strategy for greater energy security via greater domestic production and reduced reliance on imports has rarely seemed so prescient, or so far from reality. Multiple provinces in the world’s biggest energy consumer have been grappling with crippling midwinter shortfalls of electricity, coal and natural gas, as demand during the critical period surged from an extended cold snap across much of northeast Asia. Nationwide blackouts—described as the worst in nearly a decade—were seen all the way from the economic powerhouse of Zhejiang province on the eastern seaboard, through the landlocked provinces of Hunan and Jiangxi, in central China, to the southern manufacturing hub of Guangdong
Also in this section
21 April 2026
After overcoming a COVID-induced demand collapse with several years of successful market management, geopolitical events have conspired to provide the pact’s biggest test to date
21 April 2026
The regime’s policy of using nuclear ambiguity as a deterrent may have failed but it has realised it has other cards to play, while its neighbours are reappraising their approach to security
21 April 2026
As the global energy system undergoes a fundamental realignment, Algihaz Holdings has established itself as a critical player bridging conventional energy markets and the next generation of renewable infrastructure.
21 April 2026
The 25th WPC Energy Congress is taking place from 11-15 October 2026 at the Riyadh Front Exhibition & Conference Center.






