BEIJING, Aug. 14 -- More electric power will be
transmitted to Shanghai next year to meet demand during the World Expo period,
according to Shanghai's power authority.
Construction of the Sichuan-Shanghai power grid is
expected to be finished this year and the city will receive 6,400 megawatts of
new capacity from Xiangjia Dam Hydraulic Power Station on the Jinsha River in
Sichuan Province from next March. The city's current capacity is 24,100
megawatts.
The power from Sichuan will be transmitted to
transformer stations in Shanghai's Fengxian District and distributed to other
areas of the city.
"The electricity from Xiangjia Dam will improve the
city's power supply structure," said Shanghai Electric Power Co Ltd spokesman
Wang Changxing.
Wang said that the current power grid couldn't cover
demand in the southern part of the city.
Meanwhile, construction of two 800-kilovolt
transformer stations, in Fengxian, will be finished this year.
"We have power transmitted from other provinces to
Baoshan, Yangpu, Songjiang and Minhang districts, but the present network can
not pass the electricity everywhere, especially to southern areas of the city,"
Wang said. "The new transformer stations will largely improve the situation."
After decades of construction, the city's power
network has already become one of the world's largest regional networks.
However, it still struggles to meet demand due to a construction boom in the
run-up to the 2010 World Expo and during heat waves when residents crank up air
conditioners.
With the 6,400 megawatts from Sichuan, the city's
power capacity will rise to 30,500 megawatts.
The power load peaked at 23,800 megawatts on July 20,
when the temperature hit 40 degrees Celsius.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)
Special
Report: Expo 2010 Shanghai
China
