China dominates low-carbon industrial projects, US lags, report says

Waste & Recycling  |  2026-06-08 12:38:01   |   By

The number of low-carbon industrial projects that have secured funding over the last six months has more than ​doubled year-on-year to 19, worth $43 billion, with the ‌bulk of them in China, a report said on Monday.

LONDON, June 8 (Reuters) - The number of low-carbon industrial projects that have secured funding over the last six months has more than ​doubled year-on-year to 19, worth $43 billion, with the ‌bulk of them in China, a report said on Monday.

Some 13 of the projects that reached a final investment decision from November to ​April were in China, ranging from methanol to aluminium, ​while only one of them was in the U.S., a report by the Mission Possible Partnership said.

The 19 projects ​getting funding compared to eight projects in the same period ​a year ago, it added.

Green industrial investment accelerated during a period when the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran, pushing up prices of fossil fuels.

'In ​an increasingly fragmented and unstable environment, fossil-fuel dependence has shown ​time and again to mean exposure to price shocks, supply disruption, and ‌economic crises,' said Faustine Delasalle, CEO of the MPP.

The MPP is a U.S.-based non-profit group seeking to boost the growth of low-emission industry and is supported by the Bezos Earth Fund and ​the World Economic ​Forum.

The total pipeline of announced low-carbon industrial projects is 969 in sectors that include chemicals, aviation, cement and metals.

China accounts for 170 of the announced ​projects, while so-called 'sunbelt' countries including India and Brazil have 318, Europe with 211 and the United States at 72.

'The United States has a significant pipeline, but is losing relative momentum,' the report said, adding the number of announced projects dropped by 20 from 92 over 12 months.