China will not experience the same large-scale power shortages that have hit
the nation over the past several years this summer.
The country will reach a balance between energy supply and demand in the
second half of the year, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC),
the country's top economic planning body, said yesterday.
"With a number of new power stations coming on line, China will generally not
see power shortages this summer," Zhang Guobao, vice-chairman of the NDRC, told
a press conference at the State Council Information Office.
"And in electricity thirsty areas such as Zhejiang and Guangdong provinces,
power shortages will not occur," he added.
The installed capacity of new power stations that came online in the first
four months of this year alone amounts to 22.39 gigawatts, with total national
capacity reaching 531 gigawatts.
With other power stations in construction Zhang said capacity will rise by a
total of more than 70 gigawatts by the end of the year.
China's power industry has seen double-digit growth over the past four years,
with production rising 14.9 per cent between 2004 and 2005 alone.
But with economic growth pushing electricity demand beyond generation
capacity the nation has experienced power shortages since 2002.
In a drive to promote efficiency the government will close small coal-fired
generators, whose outdated technology is uneconomical, said Zhang.
Coal-fired generators with a combined capacity of 15 gigawatts will be closed
over the next five years.
Zhang said the government also planned to link the electricity pricing system
more closely to raw material movements.
Because of the increasing cost of coal, the government approved a mechanism
linking coal and power prices in 2004.
The mechanism stipulates that if the price of coal rises by more than 5 per
cent in any six-month period, electricity prices can be adjusted.
It allows for 70 per cent of coal price increases to be transferred to
end-users. Power generation firms bear the remaining 30 per cent.
Coal power plants account for about 70 per cent of China's power industry,
but the government has vowed to promote clean energy sources, such as nuclear
power, to meet electricity needs.
The government aims to increase the capacity of nuclear power stations to 40
gigawatts by 2020, accounting for 4 per cent of total capacity.
China has opened bidding for companies to build its third generation of
nuclear power stations, which will be located in Sanmen, in East China's
Zhejiang Province, and in Yangjiang, in South China's Guangdong Province.
The government is still in negotiation with foreign companies hoping to build
the new nuclear plants, said Zhang.
Bidders involved in the talks so far include Paris-based Areva,
Pittsburgh-based but UK-owned Westinghouse Electric Company and Russia's
AtomStroyExport.
(China Daily 06/09/2006 page2)