Hotznplotzn

joined 1 year ago
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50394868

The exposed Elasticsearch cluster, which contained over 160 indices, held billions of primarily Chinese records, ranging from national citizen ID numbers to various business records. The massive leak is among the largest single Elasticsearch exposures ever recorded.

Archived

  • Cybernews researchers discovered 8.7 billion exposed Chinese records on an unsecured Elasticsearch cluster, one of history's largest data leaks.
  • The leaked data includes national ID numbers, home addresses, plaintext passwords, and social media identifiers, creating severe identity theft risks.
  • The exposed database remained publicly accessible for over three weeks before being closed, giving attackers ample time to scrape data.
  • Researchers believe the dataset was intentionally aggregated on bulletproof hosting, suggesting data broker activity or malicious intent.

[...]

According to the team, the exposed data aggregates personal identifiers, contact information, government-style identifiers, online account references, and credentials at an unprecedented scale.

The geographic distribution of the leaked records is limited, predominantly focusing on mainland China, with regional metadata spanning multiple Chinese provinces and cities.

[...]

Personally Identifiable Information (PII):

  • Full names
  • Mobile phone numbers
  • National ID numbers
  • Home addresses
  • Date and place of birth
  • Gender and demographic attributes

Account and platform data:

  • Messaging and social media identifiers
  • Email addresses
  • Usernames
  • Platform-specific account references

Authentication data:

  • Plaintext and weakly protected passwords in multiple datasets

Corporate and Business Records:

  • Company registration details
  • Legal representatives
  • Business contact information
  • Registration addresses and licensing metadata

Largest Chinese data leak: What are its implications?

Even though the 8.7 billion-record-strong dataset is no longer accessible, it was open for over three weeks, giving malicious actors ample time to scrape it. Our researchers believe attackers could utilize the data for multiple purposes.

For one, the exposed records included plaintext credentials, some with poorly protected passwords. This type of data is extremely useful for account takeovers, with cybercriminals accessing additional user details. Password information enables cybercrooks to carry out credential stuffing attacks, as users often reuse the same passwords for multiple accounts.

Another major risk for individuals is identity theft. Since the dataset included tremendous amounts of PII, together with national identifiers, malicious actors may attempt to set up fraudulent accounts. ID numbers are often the key metric that organizations and businesses demand upon setting up accounts.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50394868

The exposed Elasticsearch cluster, which contained over 160 indices, held billions of primarily Chinese records, ranging from national citizen ID numbers to various business records. The massive leak is among the largest single Elasticsearch exposures ever recorded.

Archived

  • Cybernews researchers discovered 8.7 billion exposed Chinese records on an unsecured Elasticsearch cluster, one of history's largest data leaks.
  • The leaked data includes national ID numbers, home addresses, plaintext passwords, and social media identifiers, creating severe identity theft risks.
  • The exposed database remained publicly accessible for over three weeks before being closed, giving attackers ample time to scrape data.
  • Researchers believe the dataset was intentionally aggregated on bulletproof hosting, suggesting data broker activity or malicious intent.

[...]

According to the team, the exposed data aggregates personal identifiers, contact information, government-style identifiers, online account references, and credentials at an unprecedented scale.

The geographic distribution of the leaked records is limited, predominantly focusing on mainland China, with regional metadata spanning multiple Chinese provinces and cities.

[...]

Personally Identifiable Information (PII):

  • Full names
  • Mobile phone numbers
  • National ID numbers
  • Home addresses
  • Date and place of birth
  • Gender and demographic attributes

Account and platform data:

  • Messaging and social media identifiers
  • Email addresses
  • Usernames
  • Platform-specific account references

Authentication data:

  • Plaintext and weakly protected passwords in multiple datasets

Corporate and Business Records:

  • Company registration details
  • Legal representatives
  • Business contact information
  • Registration addresses and licensing metadata

Largest Chinese data leak: What are its implications?

Even though the 8.7 billion-record-strong dataset is no longer accessible, it was open for over three weeks, giving malicious actors ample time to scrape it. Our researchers believe attackers could utilize the data for multiple purposes.

For one, the exposed records included plaintext credentials, some with poorly protected passwords. This type of data is extremely useful for account takeovers, with cybercriminals accessing additional user details. Password information enables cybercrooks to carry out credential stuffing attacks, as users often reuse the same passwords for multiple accounts.

Another major risk for individuals is identity theft. Since the dataset included tremendous amounts of PII, together with national identifiers, malicious actors may attempt to set up fraudulent accounts. ID numbers are often the key metric that organizations and businesses demand upon setting up accounts.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50394868

The exposed Elasticsearch cluster, which contained over 160 indices, held billions of primarily Chinese records, ranging from national citizen ID numbers to various business records. The massive leak is among the largest single Elasticsearch exposures ever recorded.

Archived

  • Cybernews researchers discovered 8.7 billion exposed Chinese records on an unsecured Elasticsearch cluster, one of history's largest data leaks.
  • The leaked data includes national ID numbers, home addresses, plaintext passwords, and social media identifiers, creating severe identity theft risks.
  • The exposed database remained publicly accessible for over three weeks before being closed, giving attackers ample time to scrape data.
  • Researchers believe the dataset was intentionally aggregated on bulletproof hosting, suggesting data broker activity or malicious intent.

[...]

According to the team, the exposed data aggregates personal identifiers, contact information, government-style identifiers, online account references, and credentials at an unprecedented scale.

The geographic distribution of the leaked records is limited, predominantly focusing on mainland China, with regional metadata spanning multiple Chinese provinces and cities.

[...]

Personally Identifiable Information (PII):

  • Full names
  • Mobile phone numbers
  • National ID numbers
  • Home addresses
  • Date and place of birth
  • Gender and demographic attributes

Account and platform data:

  • Messaging and social media identifiers
  • Email addresses
  • Usernames
  • Platform-specific account references

Authentication data:

  • Plaintext and weakly protected passwords in multiple datasets

Corporate and Business Records:

  • Company registration details
  • Legal representatives
  • Business contact information
  • Registration addresses and licensing metadata

Largest Chinese data leak: What are its implications?

Even though the 8.7 billion-record-strong dataset is no longer accessible, it was open for over three weeks, giving malicious actors ample time to scrape it. Our researchers believe attackers could utilize the data for multiple purposes.

For one, the exposed records included plaintext credentials, some with poorly protected passwords. This type of data is extremely useful for account takeovers, with cybercriminals accessing additional user details. Password information enables cybercrooks to carry out credential stuffing attacks, as users often reuse the same passwords for multiple accounts.

Another major risk for individuals is identity theft. Since the dataset included tremendous amounts of PII, together with national identifiers, malicious actors may attempt to set up fraudulent accounts. ID numbers are often the key metric that organizations and businesses demand upon setting up accounts.

[...]

 

The exposed Elasticsearch cluster, which contained over 160 indices, held billions of primarily Chinese records, ranging from national citizen ID numbers to various business records. The massive leak is among the largest single Elasticsearch exposures ever recorded.

Archived

  • Cybernews researchers discovered 8.7 billion exposed Chinese records on an unsecured Elasticsearch cluster, one of history's largest data leaks.
  • The leaked data includes national ID numbers, home addresses, plaintext passwords, and social media identifiers, creating severe identity theft risks.
  • The exposed database remained publicly accessible for over three weeks before being closed, giving attackers ample time to scrape data.
  • Researchers believe the dataset was intentionally aggregated on bulletproof hosting, suggesting data broker activity or malicious intent.

[...]

According to the team, the exposed data aggregates personal identifiers, contact information, government-style identifiers, online account references, and credentials at an unprecedented scale.

The geographic distribution of the leaked records is limited, predominantly focusing on mainland China, with regional metadata spanning multiple Chinese provinces and cities.

[...]

Personally Identifiable Information (PII):

  • Full names
  • Mobile phone numbers
  • National ID numbers
  • Home addresses
  • Date and place of birth
  • Gender and demographic attributes

Account and platform data:

  • Messaging and social media identifiers
  • Email addresses
  • Usernames
  • Platform-specific account references

Authentication data:

  • Plaintext and weakly protected passwords in multiple datasets

Corporate and Business Records:

  • Company registration details
  • Legal representatives
  • Business contact information
  • Registration addresses and licensing metadata

Largest Chinese data leak: What are its implications?

Even though the 8.7 billion-record-strong dataset is no longer accessible, it was open for over three weeks, giving malicious actors ample time to scrape it. Our researchers believe attackers could utilize the data for multiple purposes.

For one, the exposed records included plaintext credentials, some with poorly protected passwords. This type of data is extremely useful for account takeovers, with cybercriminals accessing additional user details. Password information enables cybercrooks to carry out credential stuffing attacks, as users often reuse the same passwords for multiple accounts.

Another major risk for individuals is identity theft. Since the dataset included tremendous amounts of PII, together with national identifiers, malicious actors may attempt to set up fraudulent accounts. ID numbers are often the key metric that organizations and businesses demand upon setting up accounts.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50369424

Archived

Russia’s occupation ‘Zaporizhzhia regional court’ has sentenced 56-year-old Volodymyr Perzhynsky to over 12 years’ maximum-security imprisonment just days after the same illegitimate body passed an ever harsher, 15-year sentence against Volodymyr’s 25-year-old son, Mark Perzhynsky. Everything about this family persecution, from the initial abduction of father and son to Volodymyr Perzhynsky’s videoed ‘confession’ and two sentences passed without any evidence of real trials, is ominously reminiscent of countless other cases where Russia’s FSB have claimed to have ‘thwarted’ Ukrainian saboteurs.

[...]

Volodymyr Perzhynsky, who is from Bratske, in Melitopol raion, is a prominent farmer, while his son was well-known as a professional weightlifter. Although most of the aspects of their ‘case’ have been seen before, the eye-watering amounts that both father and son were ordered to pay in supposed ‘compensation’, as well as in fines, only increase the suspicion that they were targeted in retaliation for Volodymyr Perzhynsky’s refusal to collaborate with the Russian occupiers. According to the Ukrainian publication RIA-South, all local farmers came under huge pressure from the invaders, were forced to hand over their grain for a pittance, were threatened at gunpoint and often subjected to abductions and fabrication of criminal charges.

[...]

Judging by the dates, it seems likely that both men were abducted around November 2023, with nothing to indicate how long they were held incommunicado, without any formal status, before being charged. It is particularly during such periods where a person is denied any contact with independent lawyers or family, that detainees are subjected to illegal forms of duress, including torture, in order to fabricate ‘evidence’.

56-year-old Volodymyr Perzhynsky was sentenced to 12 years and 5 months of maximum-security imprisonment, with the first four years in a prison, the harshest of Russian penal institutions.

Mark Perzhynsky (25) received a 15-year maximum-security sentence, also with the first four years in a prison.

The illegal occupation ‘Zaporizhzhia regional court’ also imposed one million roubles fines against both father and son and ordered confiscation of money to cover supposed ‘damages’ claimed to reach 17.6 million rouble ‘damages’.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50369053

Archived

[...]

A growing number of Russians are complaining about the rising cost of living, saying that increases in everything from utilities to food and alcohol are putting mounting strain on their wallets.

Social media has been flooded in recent weeks with videos showing shoppers comparing current prices with those of last year.

[...]

State statistics agency Rosstat says inflation stood at 5.6% at the end of 2025, while average prices for goods and services rose 4.2% in 2025.

The Central Bank has said that average wages are outpacing these increases, rising by 15% in 2025 and exceeding 100,000 rubles ($1,306) per month in 19 regions.

But there is a wide gap between these official figures and people’s lived experiences. A survey by the Public Opinion Foundation conducted for the Central Bank said perceived inflation — a measurement of how ordinary Russians experience rising prices — now stands at 14.5%.

[...]

Yelizaveta, a mother of several children from Moscow who heads a department at a Russian company, said she has recently switched to strict budgeting and started choosing the cheapest options when shopping for her family in response to the increasing prices.

“I’ve become more attentive to discounts,” Yelizaveta, 42, told The Moscow Times, adding that she now shops at the Pyaterochka grocery chain instead of the more expensive Perekrestok.

“There are certain products I just can’t give up, but apart from those exceptions, I look at the price first,” she said, adding that her family of five spends around 10,000 rubles ($130) a week on groceries.

Yelizaveta said she has stopped using beauty salons altogether and that paying for her children’s educational and extracurricular activities has become “almost impossible.”

[...]

Economist Vladislav Zhukovsky said public-sector workers and pensioners were particularly affected because wages, pensions and social benefits are indexed to the official inflation rate rather than the real inflation rate.

[...]

Rosstat data shows that items like lemons and coffee saw steep price rises in 2025, with per-kilogram prices up 31.8% and 25.8% respectively. Rents increased 22.1%.

[...]

Prices spiked in early January, when consumer prices rose 1.26% between Jan. 1 and 12. That is more than six times the increase recorded in the final tracked week of December, when Rosstat reported that consumer price growth had slowed to 0.2%.

[...]

According to Rosstat data, the largest price increases last month were seen in fruits and vegetables like cucumbers (34.4%), tomatoes (19.4%), potatoes (10.3%), carrots (8.3%) and cabbage (7.6%).

The anti-war economic project Prices Today reported that cucumbers recorded the sharpest increase of any product last month, rising 23.5%. Only seven of 108 product categories tracked by the project saw prices fall in January, including semolina flour, buckwheat, pearl barley, millet, peas, salt and sugar.

As ordinary Russians have taken to the internet to decry the price increases since the new year, officials have moved to downplay the concerns.

[...]

Meanwhile, the Credit Bank of Moscow posts a rare loss as bad loans surge.

Credit Bank of Moscow (MKB), Russia’s seventh-largest bank by assets and holder of around 700 billion rubles ($9.1 billion) in household deposits, reported a net loss of 9 billion rubles ($117 million) in the fourth quarter of 2025, Interfax reported, citing the bank’s financial statements.

 

Archived

Russia’s occupation ‘Zaporizhzhia regional court’ has sentenced 56-year-old Volodymyr Perzhynsky to over 12 years’ maximum-security imprisonment just days after the same illegitimate body passed an ever harsher, 15-year sentence against Volodymyr’s 25-year-old son, Mark Perzhynsky. Everything about this family persecution, from the initial abduction of father and son to Volodymyr Perzhynsky’s videoed ‘confession’ and two sentences passed without any evidence of real trials, is ominously reminiscent of countless other cases where Russia’s FSB have claimed to have ‘thwarted’ Ukrainian saboteurs.

[...]

Volodymyr Perzhynsky, who is from Bratske, in Melitopol raion, is a prominent farmer, while his son was well-known as a professional weightlifter. Although most of the aspects of their ‘case’ have been seen before, the eye-watering amounts that both father and son were ordered to pay in supposed ‘compensation’, as well as in fines, only increase the suspicion that they were targeted in retaliation for Volodymyr Perzhynsky’s refusal to collaborate with the Russian occupiers. According to the Ukrainian publication RIA-South, all local farmers came under huge pressure from the invaders, were forced to hand over their grain for a pittance, were threatened at gunpoint and often subjected to abductions and fabrication of criminal charges.

[...]

Judging by the dates, it seems likely that both men were abducted around November 2023, with nothing to indicate how long they were held incommunicado, without any formal status, before being charged. It is particularly during such periods where a person is denied any contact with independent lawyers or family, that detainees are subjected to illegal forms of duress, including torture, in order to fabricate ‘evidence’.

56-year-old Volodymyr Perzhynsky was sentenced to 12 years and 5 months of maximum-security imprisonment, with the first four years in a prison, the harshest of Russian penal institutions.

Mark Perzhynsky (25) received a 15-year maximum-security sentence, also with the first four years in a prison.

The illegal occupation ‘Zaporizhzhia regional court’ also imposed one million roubles fines against both father and son and ordered confiscation of money to cover supposed ‘damages’ claimed to reach 17.6 million rouble ‘damages’.

 

Archived

[...]

A growing number of Russians are complaining about the rising cost of living, saying that increases in everything from utilities to food and alcohol are putting mounting strain on their wallets.

Social media has been flooded in recent weeks with videos showing shoppers comparing current prices with those of last year.

[...]

State statistics agency Rosstat says inflation stood at 5.6% at the end of 2025, while average prices for goods and services rose 4.2% in 2025.

The Central Bank has said that average wages are outpacing these increases, rising by 15% in 2025 and exceeding 100,000 rubles ($1,306) per month in 19 regions.

But there is a wide gap between these official figures and people’s lived experiences. A survey by the Public Opinion Foundation conducted for the Central Bank said perceived inflation — a measurement of how ordinary Russians experience rising prices — now stands at 14.5%.

[...]

Yelizaveta, a mother of several children from Moscow who heads a department at a Russian company, said she has recently switched to strict budgeting and started choosing the cheapest options when shopping for her family in response to the increasing prices.

“I’ve become more attentive to discounts,” Yelizaveta, 42, told The Moscow Times, adding that she now shops at the Pyaterochka grocery chain instead of the more expensive Perekrestok.

“There are certain products I just can’t give up, but apart from those exceptions, I look at the price first,” she said, adding that her family of five spends around 10,000 rubles ($130) a week on groceries.

Yelizaveta said she has stopped using beauty salons altogether and that paying for her children’s educational and extracurricular activities has become “almost impossible.”

[...]

Economist Vladislav Zhukovsky said public-sector workers and pensioners were particularly affected because wages, pensions and social benefits are indexed to the official inflation rate rather than the real inflation rate.

[...]

Rosstat data shows that items like lemons and coffee saw steep price rises in 2025, with per-kilogram prices up 31.8% and 25.8% respectively. Rents increased 22.1%.

[...]

Prices spiked in early January, when consumer prices rose 1.26% between Jan. 1 and 12. That is more than six times the increase recorded in the final tracked week of December, when Rosstat reported that consumer price growth had slowed to 0.2%.

[...]

According to Rosstat data, the largest price increases last month were seen in fruits and vegetables like cucumbers (34.4%), tomatoes (19.4%), potatoes (10.3%), carrots (8.3%) and cabbage (7.6%).

The anti-war economic project Prices Today reported that cucumbers recorded the sharpest increase of any product last month, rising 23.5%. Only seven of 108 product categories tracked by the project saw prices fall in January, including semolina flour, buckwheat, pearl barley, millet, peas, salt and sugar.

As ordinary Russians have taken to the internet to decry the price increases since the new year, officials have moved to downplay the concerns.

[...]

Meanwhile, the Credit Bank of Moscow posts a rare loss as bad loans surge.

Credit Bank of Moscow (MKB), Russia’s seventh-largest bank by assets and holder of around 700 billion rubles ($9.1 billion) in household deposits, reported a net loss of 9 billion rubles ($117 million) in the fourth quarter of 2025, Interfax reported, citing the bank’s financial statements.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50366933

Two Chinese nationals suspected of trying to intercept satellite communications from a base in an Airbnb rental property in southwestern France have been placed under formal investigation, the Paris public prosecutor's office said on Thursday.

Police were first alerted last week when locals noticed that a roughly two-metre-wide satellite dish being installed at the property in Gironde, which coincided with an internet outage, the office said.

[...]

The two Chinese nationals, and two other people, were arrested and brought before an investigating judge on Wednesday and were formally placed under investigation.

[...]

The case is the latest in a series of incidents involving allegations of Chinese spying in Europe.

Tensions between Beijing and Western powers over espionage have risen in recent years as Western intelligence agencies increasingly sound the alarm on alleged Chinese state-backed hacking activity. China has consistently denied the allegations. China has also alleged hacking operations by Western countries.

[...]

The judicial investigation will focus on alleged offences including the unlawful disclosure of sensitive information to foreign entities, potentially harming national interests, and the organised theft of data from an automated processing system.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50366642

Archived

The officer, whose identity has not been publicly disclosed, served in a critical communications and electronic systems role within the Air Force. Initial reports indicate the leaked data pertained to sensitive NATO-related intelligence, though officials have emphasized that the recipient was not neighboring Turkey, with whom Greece maintains strained relations. Instead, sources point to China as the beneficiary.

[...]

This incident is not isolated. It follows a pattern of confirmed Chinese espionage activities targeting Greek military assets. In July 2025, four Chinese nationals were detained near Tanagra Air Base for photographing Hellenic Rafale fighter jets and nearby facilities operated by the Hellenic Aerospace Industry (HAI). The group, which included a minor and posed as tourists, was found with extensive multimedia evidence of the base's operations. Greek authorities launched a thorough investigation to determine if this was part of a broader intelligence-gathering campaign, raising alarms about Beijing's interest in advanced European military technologies.

[...]

Beyond espionage, tensions extend to maritime domains. The Hellenic Navy has been actively engaged in the Red Sea as part of the EU's Operation Aspides, countering threats from Yemen's Houthi rebels amid disruptions to global shipping lanes. While direct confrontations with Chinese forces have not been reported, analysts note China's growing naval presence in the region, including incidents like a Chinese warship allegedly using a laser against a German surveillance aircraft in July 2025. Furthermore, accusations have surfaced that Chinese satellite technology may be aiding Houthi attacks, which have targeted Greek-owned vessels, exacerbating perceptions of indirect clashes with Chinese expansionism.

[...]

Economic dimensions add another layer to this multifaceted rivalry. China's state-owned COSCO Shipping holds a 67% stake in the Port of Piraeus, transforming it into a key hub for the Belt and Road Initiative. However, this investment has drawn scrutiny from the United States, which blacklisted COSCO in January 2025 over alleged ties to China's military.

[...]

Greek courts have also intervened, blocking COSCO's expansion plans in 2022 due to environmental concerns, reflecting domestic resistance to unchecked foreign influence.

[...]

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/50366933

Two Chinese nationals suspected of trying to intercept satellite communications from a base in an Airbnb rental property in southwestern France have been placed under formal investigation, the Paris public prosecutor's office said on Thursday.

Police were first alerted last week when locals noticed that a roughly two-metre-wide satellite dish being installed at the property in Gironde, which coincided with an internet outage, the office said.

[...]

The two Chinese nationals, and two other people, were arrested and brought before an investigating judge on Wednesday and were formally placed under investigation.

[...]

The case is the latest in a series of incidents involving allegations of Chinese spying in Europe.

Tensions between Beijing and Western powers over espionage have risen in recent years as Western intelligence agencies increasingly sound the alarm on alleged Chinese state-backed hacking activity. China has consistently denied the allegations. China has also alleged hacking operations by Western countries.

[...]

The judicial investigation will focus on alleged offences including the unlawful disclosure of sensitive information to foreign entities, potentially harming national interests, and the organised theft of data from an automated processing system.

[...]

 

Two Chinese nationals suspected of trying to intercept satellite communications from a base in an Airbnb rental property in southwestern France have been placed under formal investigation, the Paris public prosecutor's office said on Thursday.

Police were first alerted last week when locals noticed that a roughly two-metre-wide satellite dish being installed at the property in Gironde, which coincided with an internet outage, the office said.

[...]

The two Chinese nationals, and two other people, were arrested and brought before an investigating judge on Wednesday and were formally placed under investigation.

[...]

The case is the latest in a series of incidents involving allegations of Chinese spying in Europe.

Tensions between Beijing and Western powers over espionage have risen in recent years as Western intelligence agencies increasingly sound the alarm on alleged Chinese state-backed hacking activity. China has consistently denied the allegations. China has also alleged hacking operations by Western countries.

[...]

The judicial investigation will focus on alleged offences including the unlawful disclosure of sensitive information to foreign entities, potentially harming national interests, and the organised theft of data from an automated processing system.

[...]

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 0 points 2 days ago (1 children)

You apparently have (intentionally?) misunderstood the article.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 9 points 2 days ago (1 children)

This is an opinion piece and should at least marked as such.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

@QinShiHuangsShlong@hexbear.net

The whatabouter is you here.

Holding back with an assessment of the case and waiting for the results? The results will be published by the same party that holds them imprisoned, and these stories are well known in China.

The journalists who investigated the corruption are detained, while the official walks free. As the article also says, one of them has already been detained in 2013 for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble” - an euphemism for expressing an opinion against the party line - and for allegedly “fabricating and spreading rumours,” but was later released on bail after spending a year in detention - just for publishing the truth.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

There are lots of good reports about the Russian economy, and they all point in this same direction.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 4 days ago

Read the stats by the World Bank.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 4 points 4 days ago (4 children)

Oh, another tankie source. The Grayzone is well-known for ...

... its misleading reporting, its criticism of American foreign policy, and its sympathetic coverage of the Russian, Chinese and former Syrian governments. The Grayzone has been accused of downplaying and defending the persecution of Uyghurs in China, of publishing conspiracy theories about Xinjiang, Syria and other regions, and of publishing pro-Russian propaganda and disinformation, especially during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 0 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (3 children)

No, it means that the Chinese government is burning its own soil and air much faster than the West, and China has much higher CO2 emissions per capita than the European Union and the rest of the democratic world.

Edit for an addition: China's CO₂ emissions exceed those of the entire West: The suppressed power question in the climate debate

While the West becomes bogged down in moral debates, the 2024 emissions data is creating a new geopolitical reality. The figures are clear: China's CO₂ emissions now exceed the combined emissions of the US, the EU, Russia, and Japan.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 4 days ago (1 children)

You’re implying it was the government’s intent rather than incompetence?

I wouldn't say incompetence in that there are many excellent experts in China who perfectly know -and always knew- a better way forward. The problem imo is that they have nothing to say, and everyone who dares to express an even slightly different opinion than the central government risks to get in big trouble.

As an example: Because China wants to achieve its planned GDP growth, political leaders in the provinces are given 'targets' by the central government for their regional output. To reach this target (and secure their political careers?), they build coal plants and other infrastructure, although they are often not needed. As regional leaders want to achieve their local GDP goals, there is also little incentive to collaborate with each other - such as in joint grid investments that would enable them to share resources. (The central government has announced it will invest in its countrywide grid some time ago, but so far nothing tangible has happened.)

One result is excessive overcapacity in a large number (all?) sectors.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 7 points 4 days ago (4 children)

No. Just read the article. Most solar panels China produces sit and do nothing. Instead of investing into the domestic grid, China pursued a policy to subsidies production even as the output is not needed, neither in China nor in the world. The only thing Western countries are to blame is that they didn't ban cheap Chinese tech already back in the 2000s (industry experts have warned about this even then).

This problem has intentionally been "Made in China." Something like this happens if a centralized government wants to gain control over entire supply chains while ignoring economic realities.

China's government has been getting a lot wrong here for a long time, and by now there seems to be no intention to correct course. There are many excellent analyses that proof this, for example, one is here:

The explanation for China’s recent coal boom lies in a combination of policy priorities, institutional incentives and system-level mismatches, with origins in the widespread power shortages China experienced in the early 2020s.

In 2021, a “mismatch” between the price of coal and the government-set price of coal-fired power incentivised coal-fired power plants to cut generation ... China had – and still has – more than enough “dispatchable” resources to meet even the highest demand peaks. (Dispatchable sources include coal, gas, nuclear and hydropower.) It also has more than enough underutilised coal-power capacity to meet potential demand growth.

A bigger factor behind the shortages was grid inflexibility. During both the 2020 power crisis in north-east China and the 2022 shortage in Sichuan, affected provinces continued to export electricity while experiencing local shortages.

A lack of coordination between provinces and inflexible market mechanisms governing the “dispatch” of power plants – the instructions to adjust generation up or down – meant that existing resources could not be fully utilised ... Nevertheless, with coal power plants cheap to build and quick to gain approval, many provinces saw them as a reliable way to reassure policymakers, balance local grids and support industry interests, regardless of whether the plants would end up being economically viable or frequently used ...

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 0 points 4 days ago

This has nothing to do with America. But a nice attempt of distraction.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 4 points 5 days ago

This headline is even for an outlet like the world socialist website - one of the worst outlets parroting Chinese propaganda and supporting its aggression against Taiwan and other neighbours - unusually disconnected. The regime in Iran is killing its own people, even the wounded are shot dead as I have read. This so-called 'article' is absolutely disgusting.

[–] Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 5 days ago

China's 'four-year spree energy spree' has not only eclipsed the entire US power grid. It is even worse: China's solar industry's capacity reached levels capable of satisfying global demand roughly twice over, according to figures from late last year.

And this is only solar. China is also the world's largest producer, importer, and consumer of coal. The country burns 56% of the world's coal, has tripled consumption since 2000 and is building coal plants at the fastest pace in the last decade.

China not only increases its coal dependence but is also building solar panels it cannot use, in part because the Chinese grid is still unfit. Issues such as curtailment, where solar energy production has to shut down due to grid limitations, have become an obstacle China hasn't yet solved.

As Morningstar reports,

China's solar-capacity factor ... stood at just 14.7% in 2023, compared with 23.3% in the United States.

And it's getting worse. In 2024, solar capacity grew by 45% while generation increased only 28%. Do the math and the implied capacity factor drops toward 11% or 12%. IEEFA data shows utilization hours collapsed from 1,030 in 2020 to just 473 in 2024.

That means that roughly five-sixths of the time China's solar installations sit there doing nothing. They are the world's most expensive decorations - a clean-energy Potemkin village stretched across the provinces.

China is building solar capacity faster than it can use it, faster than its grid can absorb, faster than any economic logic would justify. The result is panels producing power that nobody can buy, connected to a grid that cannot handle the load.

But the Chinese government has been up to sustain investment growth at any cost to compensate for the decline of the country's troubled property sector and stalling domestic consumption. So China built new factories not just in solar, but also in electric cars and batteries.

Similar as in these other industries, the policy led to fierce price wars in Chinese solar markets and to an overcapacity that is now desperately seeking its solution in export markets. But despite huge state subsidies, more than 40 Chinese solar manufacturers have already gone bankrupt or halted production since 2024. One-third of China's 121 listed solar producers are operating at a loss with China's top four solar manufacturers - Longi Green Energy, Jinki Solar, JA Sola, and Trina Solar - collectively lost $1.5 billion in the first half of 2025 alone.

Chinese solar companies have already responded by laying off a third of their workers, according to a Reuters analysis of company filings.

Yet the headline tells you of a thriving Chinese renewable energy industry.

I could continue this for a long time, but I don't want to overdo it. The linked reports make an excellent read, though, and you'll find more across the web.

Some say that exceptionally low prices help accelerate solar adoption to save the climate, but this is short-term thinking imo. In the long-term it is much better if we develop diverse suppliers working across different supply chains to reach a more stable, fast, and - above all - just energy transition.

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