"12 May 2023".
China's emissions appear to have been flat in 2024, gone down in 2025. Note, same domain as your own link: https://www.carbonbrief.org/analysis-chinas-co2-emissions-ha...
We (humanity) need much more than that, of course, but it doesn't help anyone to use old data.
On the up side, all this is being done for nice boring economic reasons (renewables are cheaper than alternative power sources), which means energy-based emissions are likely to go away automatically all by themselves.
On the down side again, there's lots of emission sources other than energy. Cattle and concrete are big ones (even cement at 3% is still worse than aviation is), but basically everything more than grassland degradation (which is 0.1% of CO2 emissions) needs to be resolved for long-term stability: https://ourworldindata.org/ghg-emissions-by-sector
Also on the down side, the correct time to have made big leaps here even with just the energy part was "about 5-10 years ago": https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/co2-mitigation-15c