The government is working to improve China's photovoltaic solar industry by encouraging distributed power generation.
A power transmission line connecting Xinjiang with other areas in northwest China will be completed in June next year, three months ahead of schedule.
The export volume of China's photovoltaic solar products will drop to about $13 billion this year, down 40 percent year-on-year.
China may almost double its upper limit for solar power installed capacity to 40 gigawatts by 2015 from the current 21 gW.
Solar products manufacturers like Yingli are gaining strength from the burgeoning domestic market.
The ongoing solar energy trade war has brought opportunities for the thin-film solar industry to develop and be applied in a larger scale.
After several years of solid sales growth, the luxury auto segment appears to be heading for a slowdown in China.
China's solar panel producers are focusing on the domestic downstream power generation sector to offset their export losses.
As China's photovoltaic solar industry hits increasing obstacles in foreign countries, many solar companies are eyeing the domestic market.
China will launch a batch of pilot projects before the year's end to promote domestic use of photovoltaic power.
The photovoltaic power generation installation capacity connected to the China State Grid by the end of September was up 415 percent from the same period last year.
The possible establishment of new business partnerships amid supportive government initiatives may raise the solar industry's chances for recovery.
China is creating supportive measures to shore up its ailing photovoltaic industry, which has been rocked by recent US duties on Chinese exports over alleged dumping.
US Commerce Department announced its affirmative final determinations in antidumping duty and countervailing duty investigations on crystalline silicon photovoltaic cells from China.
Several heavyweight Chinese photovoltaic manufacturers have denied receiving illegal governmental subsidies as alleged by some of their European counterparts.
A senior official of China's commerce ministry called for solving China-EU solar panel friction through dialogue to safeguard bilateral economic relations.
The European Commission's anti-dumping investigation of China's solar panel products harms the development of alternative energy, said the head of the Chinese solar company involved in the case.
China's leading solar panel manufacturer, Trina Solar, is confident in the future cooperation with European companies.
The Chinese government on Tuesday sent a delegation to Europe to negotiate with the European Union about the trade friction over solar panel imports.
The European Commission will soon decide whether to start an investigation into Chinese photovoltaic companies after some European solar enterprises filed an anti-dumping complaint.