China's two largest manufacturing centers are set to lower electricity rates next year as the government ramps up efforts to revitalize industrial output. The move signals a push to ease production costs and boost competitiveness across the sector. Lower power expenses could ripple through supply chains and impact operational costs for data-heavy industries. This pricing adjustment reflects broader efforts to stabilize growth momentum in manufacturing hubs.
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GasDevourer
· 01-03 01:45
Can this reduction in electricity costs really save the manufacturing industry, or is it just superficial data that looks good on paper?
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BottomMisser
· 01-02 19:45
They're starting to flood the market again to stimulate the manufacturing industry. How long will it take for this strategy to actually show results?
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YieldWhisperer
· 01-02 11:30
nah wait, let me run the numbers on this one... lower electricity rates sound nice on paper but actually the math doesn't check out when you factor in the real depreciation curves. classic government move to paper over structural problems, saw this exact playbook back in 2021 with the whole "stimulus = growth" narrative lol
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WalletDoomsDay
· 2025-12-31 05:28
China lowers electricity prices, will GPU farms be crying now?
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GateUser-e51e87c7
· 2025-12-31 05:21
Lower electricity prices? Now miners are going to be thrilled haha
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BTCRetirementFund
· 2025-12-31 05:18
Electricity prices are lowered, will supply chain costs loosen up? For those big electricity consumers in data centers, hehe, they'll save quite a bit this time.
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YieldChaser
· 2025-12-31 05:17
Damn, with electricity costs dropping, the supply chain is moving too? Feels like data centers are about to celebrate again.
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VitaliksTwin
· 2025-12-31 05:05
Lower electricity costs? Now miners are going to laugh their heads off haha
China's two largest manufacturing centers are set to lower electricity rates next year as the government ramps up efforts to revitalize industrial output. The move signals a push to ease production costs and boost competitiveness across the sector. Lower power expenses could ripple through supply chains and impact operational costs for data-heavy industries. This pricing adjustment reflects broader efforts to stabilize growth momentum in manufacturing hubs.