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Rescuers of the Guangxi Grid work on an
electricity tower on the Sanqianjie Mountain in Quanzhou County, Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region in south China, Feb. 10, 2008. After continuous
efforts, the Guangxi Grid finished fixing the last broken electric tower
near the Sanqianjie Mountain bordering Quanzhou County and Ziyuan County,
on 6 p.m., Feb. 10. Ziyuan County was out of electricity for several days
due to the snow storm. It resumed electricity supply in all areas on 9
a.m., Feb. 11, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Feb. 11 (Xinhua) -- Power supply and coal
reserves continued to resume in China on Monday, while the government has been
exerting efforts to maintain price stability after a worst-in-decades snow
snarl.
A total of 22.12 million households, or 93.1 percent
of those deprived of power during the snow storm, had regained access to
electricity by Monday, said the Disaster Relief and Emergency Command Center
under the State Council on Monday night.
Reserves of coal for power generation increased
800,000 tons to 23.1 million tons on Sunday, equaling 12 days' supply for
the country's power plants, said the command center.
It said in a statement that government departments
had beefed up coal transportation as coal shipments from north China's four
major ports hit a record high of 1.42 million tons on Sunday.
Meanwhile, the average wholesale price of vegetables
on Monday fell for the third day consecutively, down 0.3 percent from Sunday,
but prices of most vegetables rose in the provinces of Hunan, Anhui and Sichuan,
all severely hit by the cold chill, according to the command center.
Figures from the Ministry of Commerce showed egg,
beef and mutton prices saw a small drop while prices of edible oil and
small-packages of rice went up slightly on Monday.
The command center said market prices were basically
stable, urging disaster-hit areas to resume vegetable production and increase
supply as soon as possible.
"Snow and ice has caused heavy losses to agriculture,
especially vegetable production, in some regions," it said.
The command center required local governments to
expand the planting area of vegetables in the south for supplying the north and
increase vegetable production in green houses.
Transport departments have rushed food to snow-hit
regions to ensure supply and keep prices stable during the ongoing holiday week
to celebrate the Spring Festival, the most important traditional festival in
China.
From Jan. 25 to Sunday, railways shipped 113,000 cars
of food like grains, vegetables and fruits to disaster-hit regions, said the
command center.
China's transport systems are only just creaking back
to life after freak cold and ice storms hit swathes of the country since
mid-January, causing billions of dollars in damage and killing at least 80
people.
A total of 340,000 armed policemen had been dispatched to help disaster relief work across the country by 5 p.m. Monday, while 6.56 million stranded passengers and disaster-hit residents had been rescued by Monday, said the command center.