Highjoule
2026-01-08
In May 2025, the National Development and Reform Commission and the National Energy Administration jointly issued the ‘Notice on Matters Concerning the Orderly Promotion of Green Power Direct Connection Development’. The significance of this document is straightforward yet pivotal – green power direct connection is no longer an exploratory approach but has been formally incorporated into the national energy system design.
In other words, this is not a newly ‘invented’ concept, but a long-standing demand that has finally been recognised, regulated, and permitted for scaled development by policy.

Prior to this, a practice known as ‘over-the-wall power sales’ had gained popularity within industrial parks.
Generation and consumption sites located within the same park or adjacent plots would connect directly via a single cable, bypassing the public grid. This approach, favoured for its simplicity and cost-effectiveness, was widely adopted in areas with dense distributed photovoltaic installations.
However, its shortcomings were equally apparent:
Unclear boundaries of electricity ownership
Ambiguous responsibilities for grid access fees and dispatch
Grid operators bearing risks without commensurate influence
Persistent regulatory uncertainty
Consequently, wall-to-wall electricity sales functioned more as a tacitly tolerated stopgap arrangement.
Green electricity direct connection fundamentally institutionalises this demand.
Policy documents establish several ‘hard rules’:
Clear boundaries: Direct connection projects must have physically demarcated interfaces with the public grid
Market participation: Projects may participate as a whole in electricity markets, with controlled surplus feed-in ratios (≤20%)
Diverse participants: Generation is no longer restricted to state-owned enterprises, while consumers gain greater control
Balancing mechanisms: Permits use of energy storage and load management to stabilise fluctuations
In essence: The state has granted direct green power connections legal standing while defining clear boundaries.
Consider this real-world scenario:
You are a renewable energy or materials company exporting to Europe. Your customer’s contract explicitly requires production to use verifiable green electricity.
Men her er problemet:
When you purchase electricity from the grid, is it wind, solar, or coal-fired? No one can say for certain.
The significance of direct green power connection lies in ‘verifiability’.
Through dedicated lines, electricity from renewable power stations is transmitted point-to-point to the consumer enterprise without entering the public grid, enabling physical traceability.
The enterprise can unequivocally demonstrate to clients, regulators, and certification bodies:
The electricity consumed by this factory originates from a specific wind farm or photovoltaic base.
This is not merely ‘paper green’ but the physical use of green electricity.
Comparing the two models reveals fundamentally different objectives:
Walled-off sales: Core focus is lower electricity prices
Direct green connections: Core focus is ‘globally recognised green credentials’
In domestic markets, this difference may be merely icing on the cake;
In international trade, it often determines whether hefty carbon taxes apply.
For industries such as photovoltaics, power batteries, new materials, and chemicals,
this transcends cost optimisation—it determines ‘whether they can enter overseas markets’.
As CBAM (EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism) and the new Battery Law progressively take effect,
enterprises unable to demonstrate green electricity usage will be deemed high-carbon producers by default.
Green electricity direct connection + long-term power purchase agreements (PPAs) deliver more than:
Verifiable proof of green electricity usage
More stable, predictable electricity costs
They confer compliance capability and international market access.
The pain point for traditional renewable projects is:
‘Electricity is generated, but who will buy it and at what price remains uncertain.’
Under direct connection, the electricity consumer itself becomes the long-term buyer,
with prices typically exceeding standard grid feed-in tariffs, as enterprises are willing to pay a premium for ‘green certainty’.
This shifts the focus for renewable projects from ‘gambling on grid acceptance’ to ‘securing customers’.
Green power direct connection does not ‘bypass the grid’, but rather alleviates grid fluctuation pressures:
Renewables consumed locally
Energy storage smooths output
User side gains stable power supply
Grid side reduces peak-shaving burden
It represents a trend:
The energy system shifting from ‘generation-centric’ to ‘user-centric’.
Green power direct connection is not a policy subsidy but a clear business model:
Through dedicated lines and long-term agreements, it reduces ancillary costs and makes electricity pricing more controllable.
Green electricity attributes directly offset carbon taxes and enhance ESG ratings, offering significant value for financing and customer acquisition.
Storage systems can simultaneously participate in:
– Peak-off-peak arbitrage
– Capacity compensation
– Ancillary services markets
Only when these three elements converge does ‘direct green power connection + energy storage’ form a truly sustainable closed-loop system.
It must be acknowledged that direct green power connection still faces practical hurdles:
Regional transmission fee policies remain inconsistent
Initial energy storage investment remains disproportionately high
China-EU green certificate systems lack full mutual recognition
Dedicated line construction and approval processes are complex
However, these are matters of ‘how to proceed more swiftly,’ not ‘whether to proceed.’
Prior to national policy implementation, Jiangsu initiated pilot projects:
Connecting renewable power stations to manufacturing enterprises via 110kV dedicated lines
Configuring approximately 10–20% energy storage capacity
Requiring self-consumption ratios of no less than 60%
The outcomes are clear:
While reduced electricity prices are visible, the true value lies in enterprises obtaining green electricity usage reports for export certification.
Such projects are emerging as model initiatives for ‘industrial green electricity going global’.

På kort sikt:
It represents a new growth driver for renewable energy investment and energy storage applications, with related investment projected to reach hundreds of billions of yuan by late 2025.
På lang sikt:
It may become critical infrastructure for China’s manufacturing sector to navigate global carbon regulations and reshape competitiveness.
Fremtidig utvikling kan omfatte:
Clearer grid access fees and energy storage market regulations
A service ecosystem integrating ‘green electricity + energy storage + digital management’
Financial innovations centred on direct green electricity connections (e.g., REITs, carbon asset securitisation)
On-site electricity sales represent pilot initiatives at the industrial park level;
Direct green electricity connections signify national-level energy restructuring.
The former addresses cost concerns,
while the latter resolves issues of identity and access rights.
As global manufacturing competition shifts from ‘price and efficiency’ to ‘carbon footprint and credibility’,
direct green power connections are emerging as a green passport for Chinese enterprises to navigate the future.
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