Home>News Center>China
       
 

Shanghai tightens energy use
By Xiao Liang (China Daily)
Updated: 2004-07-07 02:20

The country's economic hub may get a little darker.

In a move to protect the electricity supply for residents and businesses, Shanghai will shut off scenic lamps during peak power-use times this summer.

The metropolis is bracing for summer heatwaves with a number of measures to deal with what officials called "seasonal power shortfalls."

Shanghai is dotted with ornamental lamps which hang on local streets and buildings to give it an appealing nighttime landscape. The lamps are scattered around the city's major scenic spots, central business areas and prime transportation hubs, including the Bund area, People's Square and Yan'an Elevated Highway.

Whenever the temperature goes above 35 C those lamps will be shut off, said Guo Hua, director of the lamp advertisement supervisory unit of the Shanghai City Appearance and Environmental Sanitation Administration.

The lamps will also be temporarily turned off whenever an urgent power need arises. Any power saved will then be transferred to areas facing shortfalls, Guo said.

"The measure's objective is to ensure a regular power supply at large."

At their maximum consumption levels, scenery lamps use up 30,000 kilowatts of electricity, about 0.2 per cent of the city's total power consumption during peak time.

While turning off the picturesque lights may rob the city of some of its nighttime attraction, particularly for tourists, the benefits of the power saving make the move worthwhile, Guo said.

The lamps under Guo's department consume about half the total power used by ornamental lamps. If they are shut off, the power savings can supply more than 10,000 local families.

Other government bodies and businesses have been encouraged to follow suit and shut down as many lights as possible particularly during heatwaves.

A similar shut-down of ornamental lamps was put in place for two weeks last summer when Shanghai experienced a serious power shortage.



 
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Taxes, fees no longer to target farmers

 

   
 

Bird flu case found after 4-month gap

 

   
 

China regrets Koizumi's defiant words

 

   
 

Rice to visit Beijing this week

 

   
 

China to begin free trade talks with GCC

 

   
 

Fake milk powder victims launches lawsuit

 

   
  China to audit more State-funded institutions
   
  Russia, China to hold joint military exercise in 2005
   
  17 killed in mudslides, cyclones and lightning
   
  Growth poses job creation challenge
   
  China regrets Koizumi's defiant words
   
  Massacre survivors' words saved forever
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  When will china have direct elections?  
Advertisement