In the heart of Inner Mongolia, Tongliao is rewriting its economic playbook by harmonizing grassland traditions with cutting-edge innovation. Known as the Chinese mainland's "Beef Capital," the city sustains a multi-billion-dollar cattle industry spanning pasture management, meat processing, and global exports. Yet its true ambition lies in harnessing the region's relentless winds – once a challenge for herders – to power a renewable energy revolution.
Over 15% of Tongliao's electricity now comes from wind turbines, with capacity set to triple by late 2027 under China's 15th Five-Year Plan. This clean energy surge isn't just lighting homes: it's fueling smart manufacturing hubs and preparing the ground for AI computing infrastructure. Local authorities recently announced plans to channel 40% of wind-generated power into data centers serving northeast Asia's tech sector.
"Our grasslands raise both livestock and opportunities," said a regional development official. "While maintaining our agricultural strengths, we're creating synergies – using livestock waste for biogas to complement wind power, and deploying AI-driven weather models to protect grazing routes."
Investors are taking note. Overseas funding in Tongliao's renewable projects grew 22% year-on-year in Q1 2026, with parallel growth in blockchain-enabled beef traceability systems. As global demand for sustainable protein and green tech rises, this grassland nexus emerges as a test case for balanced modernization.
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With wind and cattle, Tongliao plays the symphony of Grassland
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