Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions 2008
Related: Premier Wen delivers gov't
work report
Special Report: China's war on snow havoc
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Ma Kai, Chinese minister of National
Development and Reform Commission, answers a question from journalists
during a press conference on economic and social development and
macroeconomic regulation held by the First Session of the 11th National
People's Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing,
capital of China, March 6, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, March 6 (Xinhua) -- China's top macro-economic planner Ma Kai said
here Thursday that the recent snow and ice storms had limited impact on the
country and would not change the fundamentals of the economy.
The Chinese government acted promptly to the disaster and the measures
proved to be effective, the minister in charge of the National Development and
Reform Commission said at a press conference on the sidelines of China's
parliamentary session.
Traffic had returned to normal on the whole before the Spring Festival,
which falls on Feb. 7, said the official.
The country's highway network accommodated 2 billion trips while railways
196 million trips during the just-ended 40-day Spring Festival transport season.
"Could any other country transport so many people in such a short time?" said
the minister.
More than 90 percent of the power grids that damaged during the disaster
have been repaired so far, Ma added.
Coal stock for power plants currently stood at more than 27 million tons,
enough for the consumption of 14 days.
The stock had dropped to a warning level amid the snow and ice storms, with
some power plants suspending operation and others with stock of no more than one
week.
China is heavily dependent on coal as it is considered an affordable energy
resource at a time when oil and natural gas prices rise steadily in the
international market.
Snow and ice storms plagued southern China since mid-January, leading to
widespread traffic jams, structural collapses, blackouts and crop losses in 19
provinces, leaving 129 people dead and causing 151.65 billion yuan (21.3 billion
U.S. dollars) of losses.
Authorities, based on weather forecasts, had issued five warnings between
Dec. 10 last year and Jan. 19 to urge local governments to be prepared for snow
storms.
Top Communist Party of China (CPC) and state leaders went to the
disaster-hit areas to guide on the fight against disaster, which encouraged the
affected people a lot.
The State Council established a headquarters to coordinate contingency
measures for coal, oil and power supply, transportation and disaster relief in
snow-hit areas, which effectively put resources from all over the country to
combat the crisis.
The minister said defects in the economic development were discovered in
the storms, and China shall work to improve its ability to deal with major
natural disasters and emergencies.