China’s MASSIVE Desert Project Is About To Change The World

Published 2024-01-30
China’s MASSIVE Desert Project Is About To Change The World. Take your personal data back with Incogni! Use code UNDECIDED at the link below and get 60% off an annual plan: incogni.com/undecided This is the biggest solar power plant in the United States, located in Kern, California. The Solar Star Plant is over 8 square miles and has a generation capacity of 579 megawatts, powering around 255,000 homes. This is impressive, but about 6,500 miles away, in this remote desert, there's a solar facility that could dwarf it … and just about every other solar power plant on earth. And it’s not alone.

Watch 5 BEST Things I Saw in Vegas at CES 2024    • 5 BEST Things I Saw in Vegas at CES 2024  

Video script and citations:
undecidedmf.com/chinas-massive-desert-project-is-a…

Corrections:
00:05 - Kern County California

Get my achieve energy security with solar guide:
link.undecidedmf.com/solar-guide

Follow-up podcast:
Video version -    / @stilltbd  
Audio version - bit.ly/stilltbdfm

Join the Undecided Discord server:
link.undecidedmf.com/discord

👋 Support Undecided on Patreon!
www.patreon.com/mattferrell


⚙️ Gear & Products I Like
undecidedmf.com/shop/

Visit my Energysage Portal (US):
Research solar panels and get quotes for free!
link.undecidedmf.com/energysage

And find heat pump installers near you (US):
link.undecidedmf.com/energysage-heatpumps

Or find community solar near you (US):
link.undecidedmf.com/community-solar

For a curated solar buying experience (Canada)
EnergyPal's free personalized quotes:
energypal.com/undecided

Tesla Referral Code:
Get 1,000 free supercharging miles
or a discount on Tesla Solar & Powerwalls
ts.la/matthew84515


👉 Follow Me
Mastodon
mastodon.social/@mattferrell

X
twitter.com/mattferrell
twitter.com/undecidedMF

Mastodon
mastodon.social/@mattferrell

Instagram
www.instagram.com/mattferrell
www.instagram.com/undecidedmf

Facebook
www.facebook.com/undecidedMF/

Website
undecidedmf.com/


📺 YouTube Tools I Recommend
Audio file(s) provided by Epidemic Sound
bit.ly/UndecidedEpidemic

TubeBuddy
www.tubebuddy.com/undecided

VidIQ
vidiq.com/undecided


I may earn a small commission for my endorsement or recommendation to products or services linked above, but I wouldn't put them here if I didn't like them. Your purchase helps support the channel and the videos I produce. Thank y

All Comments (21)
  • @jopo7996
    What's with all the 'solar hate' in the comments? Solar is reliable, and has no moving parts. We put panels on our cottage in Ontario 22 years ago. The panels still look brand new and the system has been flawless.
  • @dodley130
    For all those complaining about covering desert land with solar panels ,I will go as far as to say, it increases biodiversity in the desert biome by offering shade to desert animals. All the buildings in the world are covering the earth surface as well. Why aren't people complaining about it, when it's china it's an issue. The surface area of china is about 9 million square miles, 8 SQ miles is negligible. It's the best interest for the whole world if china does these projects, we don't share land boundaries but we share atmosphere, the fight against global warming is global and we should encourage such projects, it might be the most future proof project in the world, but at this point we don't have time to work out the most future proof solution ever. Anything that moves towards the goal is great. We encourage countries to switch from coal to natural gas, from coal to any other generation means there is
  • @Alazen.
    People tend to hate when they are jealous of others
  • @joe_shh
    20 years ago: “China, you shall be responsible for global warming!”😡 Now: “Let’s forget about The Paris Agreement”🙄
  • @kckoay6211
    China and the United States released 11.4 and 5.1 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide in 2022 respectively. But on a per capita basis, the Americans accounted for almost twice as much greenhouse gases than their Chinese counterparts. Another takeaway is that, measured in dollar terms, China accounts for almost 30% of the world manufacturing outputs, or twice as much as that produced by the U.S. And that is achieved on the back of per capita energy consumption at half of that of the United States. Had China not moved towards green and efficient use of energy, what would China’s greenhouse gas emission be in order to produce 30% of the manufactured goods for the world?
  • @sivan1127
    Having solar panels in desert, a predominantly non usable land, is awesome.
  • @sunusiadamu5802
    Without China, we in Africa couldn't have afforded smart phones and a lot of electronics. China is a blessing to this world.
  • @trevormiller1366
    Got solar installed 15yr ago, overall it has been a cost saver and works fine here in Aus.
  • @sandzibar
    In a world of constant depressing news on economic doom and war, its always nice to watch your videos Matt that bring some positivity.
  • We put 12 solar panels on our house under three years ago plus a 5Kw battery, we projected a 9 year payback but with the greedy energy companies doubling the price of electricity then doubling it again our solar paid for itself in just over 2 years. In summer we fill the car, run the house and solar battery then feed in to the grid….for a miserly 15ppKw but still produces a few quid in credits
  • @woodtv4481
    I started solar installations way back 2004, exactly 20 years ago. From that day on, i fall inlove with Solar and our office, our house, our workshop are all run with solar. Never have to pay a cent to the grid.
  • I am an American and I am glad to see other nations like China achieve progress like this. The U.S. is big spoiled brat that can't stand to see other nations prosper and weaken it's hegemony. Kudos to China and all other nations in the world for making great innovations and making life better for their people, something the U.S. has never done.
  • If memory serves, northern China is also the location of large refining plants for aluminum and other metals, they do require large amounts of energy that is now mostly green. Also they are currently installing UHV (ultra high voltage) power lines. Once they are finished, the transmission loss will be greatly reduced and lots of coal plants will become redondant. Last but not least, energy storage battery, sodium based (since weigh and space are not an issue for such storage) is also a promising way to store the extra energy produced during day time. I do trust the Chinese to go at this methodically and efficiently. They are highly pragmatic people.
  • @craigrussell7542
    For those commenting about all the water needed to clean solar panels... Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories estimate that a typical 500-megawatt coal-fired utility that burns 250 tons of coal per hour, also uses 12 million gallons of water an hour, or 300 million gallons a day, for cooling. In the U.S., power generation is second only to agriculture in water use. To produce and burn the 1 billion tons of coal America uses each year, the mining and utility industries use from 55 trillion to 75 trillion gallons of water annually, according to the US Geological Survey.
  • I was one of the earliest rooftop solar adopters in my town of Livermore, CA. Ignoring all the naysayers, I covered my entire roof with microinverter based AC solar panels nearly 20 years ago, and the US Govt covered 60% of the cost via tax deductions. I bought all the equipment and installed the panels myself. Now 60% of the rooftops in my hometown have solar panels installed, about 10 years after I did ! Roofop solar naysayers are a vanishing breed these days! I am now generating far more power than I need for my home, and selling the excess to the power company. This solar system not only provided all the electricity I needed, but also helped me payoff my home mortgage loan! It will continue to generate power for at least another 20 years ! What is not to like ? The best investment of time and money I ever made ! 🥰!
  • @donaldlee8249
    My parents live in southwest China, where over 80% of electricity already come from clean sources, mostly hydroelectric dams and wind, with some of lowest electricity bill in the world at about 0.4 yuan or 5 cents per kwh
  • The ability to grow plants and raise livestock under the panels in what was a desert is a serious benefit.
  • @DanBurgaud
    China's south-eastern provinces have massively adopted solar panels for residential use. Several Fujian cities are producing more renewable electricity than they consume.
  • @user-ef6nh1pt6l
    When I was in Elementary school in Beijing, China in early 1980s, there was an National writing competition about Chinese future energy supply. My school district organized local experts, some of them from the Chinese Academy of Science to gave seminars on new energy source: solar, wind, hydro, nuclear, biogas etc. to ELEMENTARY SCHOOL STUDENTS. I still remember those lectures vividly as they were very interesting and inspiring. I am pretty sure some of my classmates became engineers in those fields because of that. I remebered what I wrote was a day's life in 2000, living in a solar powered City, more or less in Sci-fi movie clip fashion. Looking back, you could see some long term government planning on renewable energy.