Unusual Weather Drives China’s Biggest Power Spike in Two Years

Power generation in China jumped by the most in October in nearly two years and overall electricity output was at its highest for any October since at least 1998, as a heat wave hit southern China while temperatures were colder-than-usual in the north. 

China’s power generation surged by 7.9% in October from a year earlier, with total output at 800.2 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh), data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed on Friday. 

The October generation hit the highest for the month of October since at least 1998, according to Reuters estimates.  

Thermal power output, the one from coal, jumped by 7.3% last month. Wind power generation slumped by 12% and solar electricity generation from utility-scale plants increased by 5.9%, the smallest annual rise since May 2023, per Bloomberg estimates.  

Coal likely picked up most of the surge in electricity generation, while wind and solar power saw curtailments, analysts say. 

The likely reasons for the big jump in coal and gas generation were weather variation affecting residential and commercial power demand, and solar and wind curtailment, Lauri Myllyvirta, co-founder of Finland-based Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA), wrote on LinkedIn in comments on the Chinese data. 

“The drop in wind power generation and weak increase in solar generation reported by the stats bureau indicates that capacity utilization fell sharply, more than can be accounted for by weather conditions,” Myllyvirta said. 

“The concern is that we’re seeing a repeat of what happened at the end of last year when grid operators had contracted too much coal power under long-term contracts and decided to curtail solar and wind instead of facing the penalties from not fulfulling the coal contracts.” 

The power generation data suggests that there must also have been a sharp increase in China’s power demand in October. Since industrial production numbers don’t suggest a demand surge, the residential and service sectors were the likely reason, according to Myllyvirta. 

“October was unusually hot in the south, and much colder than previous years in the north. The rapid increase in air conditioner ownership means that people are using them more for heating in northern China, especially before district heating is turned on in November,” the analyst noted. 

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    USA Oil, Gas Workforce Shrinks in 7 of Last 10 Years

    The number of employees in the oil and gas extraction industry has dropped in seven of the last 10 years, with the latest of those decreases occurring in 2026, data…

    UAE Quits OPEC and OPEC+ as Hormuz Crisis Drags On

    The United Arab Emirates is leaving OPEC and OPEC+, effective May 1, the country’s state news agency WAM confirmed Tuesday, ending nearly six decades of membership and stripping the cartel…

    Have You Seen?

    USA Oil, Gas Workforce Shrinks in 7 of Last 10 Years

    • April 28, 2026
    USA Oil, Gas Workforce Shrinks in 7 of Last 10 Years

    Kawasaki awards hydrogen pump contract for Japan LH2 terminal

    • April 28, 2026
    Kawasaki awards hydrogen pump contract for Japan LH2 terminal

    DNV selected to approve UK CO2 transport network project

    • April 28, 2026
    DNV selected to approve UK CO2 transport network project

    TRUMP ON GAS PRICES: Americans Should Expect to Pay More ‘For a Little While’

    • April 28, 2026
    TRUMP ON GAS PRICES: Americans Should Expect to Pay More ‘For a Little While’

    “Time for Action”: Kimmeridge Releases Letter to the Future Board of Devon Energy

    • April 28, 2026
    “Time for Action”: Kimmeridge Releases Letter to the Future Board of Devon Energy

    LNG impacts from UAE leaving Opec and scale of Gulf supply shock revealed

    • April 28, 2026
    LNG impacts from UAE leaving Opec and scale of Gulf supply shock revealed

    BP Profit More Than Doubles as War-Driven Oil Trading Surges

    • April 28, 2026
    BP Profit More Than Doubles as War-Driven Oil Trading Surges

    Brent Tops $111 as Analysts Raise Forecasts on Hormuz Stalemate

    • April 28, 2026
    Brent Tops $111 as Analysts Raise Forecasts on Hormuz Stalemate

    Eni and Repsol Bet Big on Post-Maduro Venezuela

    • April 28, 2026
    Eni and Repsol Bet Big on Post-Maduro Venezuela

    Iranian Tankers Pile Up Outside Hormuz as U.S. Blockade Tightens

    • April 28, 2026
    Iranian Tankers Pile Up Outside Hormuz as U.S. Blockade Tightens