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BEIJING, March 18 -- Top energy planners are seeking,
in the next five years, to raise China's coal output to an unprecedented level
and, at the same time, reduce the number of large mining disasters.
China's coal output will be between 2.5 billion and
2.6 billion tons in 2010, as compared with 2.19 billion tons in 2005, according
to Guo Yuntao, director of the China Development Research Centre for the Coal
Industry, in an interview with China Daily.
The growth rate being forecast by the planning team
led by Guo is much slower than in the last five years, when China's coal output
rose from about 1.3 billion tons in 2000.
The forecast was based on the belief that the overall
economy will become more energy efficient and that demand is likely to rise
significantly only in the power sector, Guo said.
His centre is drafting China's coal industry
development blueprint for the coming five years, following the national 11th
Five-year (2006-10) Social and Economic Development Plan approved by National
People's Congress (NPC) deputies at its annual session that closed in Beijing on
Tuesday.
The team is providing the final touches to their
draft before submitting it, at the end of March, for approval by the National
Development and Reform Commission and the State Council, China's cabinet.
Guo said coal will remain China's fundamental energy
source, both for production and consumption.
In terms of production, coal accounted for 76 per
cent of China's energy needs in 2005, calculated using the Standard Coal
Equivalent (SCE) measure. According to Guo, that level has a chance to climb all
the way up to 80 per cent after 2010.
To satisfy growing domestic energy demands, the
country will decrease its coke exports in the coming years, the planning
director said.
China's rapidly growing economy, which is expected to
register an annual growth rate of 7.5 per cent for its gross domestic product
(GDP) this year, will create enormous demand for energy supplies. But the
nation's energy conservation campaign is just beginning, which should mean more
energy efficiency.
China's energy consumption record was an average 1.43
tons of SCE for every 10,000 yuan (US$1,234) of GDP in 2005. This is the same as
2004, despite the central government's pledge to significantly reduce energy
waste from 2006 to 2010.
Guo said the coal plan was not only "a blueprint for producing more, but also a programme for resource conservation and work safety."
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