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Construction workers erect a tower for
an ultra-high voltage power transmission line from Baiyin to Yongdeng in
Gansu province in Northwest China. (Source: China Daily) Photo
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BEIJING, Jan. 17 -- State Grid Corp of China, the country's leading
grid operator, said on Friday it planned to invest 100 billion yuan into
building ultra-high voltage (UHV) power transmission lines over the next three
to four years.
The announcement follows the group's completion of China's first UHV power
transmission line, which links the coal-rich Shanxi province to Hubei.
The UHV line also boasts the largest capacity in the world, able to
transmit 1,000 kv over 640 km, Shu Yinbiao, executive vice president of State
Grid, told a press conference on Friday.
State Grid, which oversees power supply in China's 26 provinces,
municipalities as well as autonomous regions, began the construction of the
project in 2006 and has invested 5.9 billion yuan in the Shanxi-Hubei
project.
Compared with conventional power transmission lines, UHV lines are able to
transmit electricity over a longer distance and more efficiently.
The government has also approved two other State Grid UHV power
transmission lines, one linking Sichuan and Shanghai and the other connecting
Sichuan and south Jiangsu, said Shu.
The total investment for the two lines will exceed 40 billion yuan, the
company said.
The group plans to take advantage of the rich hydropower resources in
southwest China and coal resources in north China.
"Development of UHV power networks is in accordance with China's energy
strategy," said Shu. Lots of China's water resources are in the southwest, and
two thirds of coal is in northern provinces, whereas demand centers are mainly
in the coastal regions.
Some industry insiders have raised questions over UHV power networks,
including pollution, technology and economic viability. Shu expects the new line
to eradicate these concerns.
In another development, the Beijing-based State Grid said in a statement on
Friday that it had taken over the largest stake in a consortium controlling
National Grid Corporation in the Philippines from January 15.
National Grid Corporation, includes two Philippine companies, Monte Oro
Grid Resources Corp and Calaca High Power Corp.
State Grid now has 40 percent of the consortium. It is currently China's
largest investment project in the country.
(Source: China Daily)