HARBIN, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- A biomass-fired power plant that burns plant and
vegetable stalks to generate electricity went into operation on Monday in
northeast China's Heilongjiang Province.
The power plant, with an installed capacity of 30,000 kilowatts, is
expected to burn more than 200,000 tons of stalks annually and generate 175
million kwh of electricity, according to Wang Jun'an, executive general manager
of the Guoneng Wangkui Bio Energy Company in Wangkui County, Heilongjiang
Province.
The plant is the first of its kind in northeast China.
The National Bio Energy Co., Ltd, a subsidiary of the State Grid
Corporation of China, has earmarked 553 million yuan (74.17 million U.S.
dollars) for the project.
The plant will sell greenhouse gas emission reduction credits to
Electricite de France (EDF) under the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), Wang
said.
The CDM, an arrangement under the Kyoto Protocol, allows industrialized
countries with a greenhouse gas reduction commitment to invest in projects that
reduce emissions in developing countries. It is considered an alternative to
more expensive emission reductions in industrialized countries.
National Bio Energy Company, which promotes China's renewable energy
industry through biomass power generation, aims to generate55 percent of the
country's biomass power in 2010, or three million kilowatts, to reduce carbon
dioxide emissions by 1.2 million tons.