BEIJING, Jan. 7 -- A cold wave sweeping across large
swathes of the country since Saturday has forced some provinces to ration
electricity for industrial use, but State power company officials promised
yesterday that supply to residents across those regions would not be affected.
"Even under extreme circumstances, we will ensure
residential electricity supply, which is always the top priority," said Wang
Changxing, spokesperson for the Shanghai grid, a major branch of the East China
grid.
Regions across east and central China, such as Hubei
and Jiangxi provinces, have resorted to rationing of power for industry to tide
over the icy weather that has pushed up energy demand while disrupting coal
transportation.
In Hubei alone, one of the worst-hit regions, power
cuts have been imposed on "several thousand" energy-intensive companies such as
those in the metallurgy and steel industries, said Wang Chaoying, spokesperson
for Hubei Electric Power Company.
In Wuhan, capital of Hubei, soaring demand for
residential electricity led to brownouts in some districts after the thermal
power generating system broke down in a local power plant under excessive load.
By the end of 2009, coal stockpiles in the Central
China grid network were sufficient for only 10 days, less than the recommended
15 days, according to official data.
Altogether, China took offline 4,780 megawatts linked
to its main network as of Jan. 3, according to data provided by State Grid Corp
of China, the country's major grid operator. It accounts for about 0.55 percent
of the country's overall capacity at the end of last year.
In early 2008, 7 percent of the coal-fired power
generation capacity was shut because severe snowstorms cut transportation of the
fuel.
Cities in eastern coastal regions such as Jiangsu and
Zhejiang, two economic hubs, have so far not resorted to power cuts to industry
but local authorities did not rule out the possibility should the necessity
arise.
Shanghai Grid confirmed that power in Shanghai will
not be switched off or rationed in the next couple of days.
"The power load at the Shanghai grid dropped from
19.42 million kilowatts on Tuesday to 19.32 million kilowatts on Wednesday,
thanks to the rising temperature," said Wang Changxing.
"The power shortage won't last long since it's caused
mainly by the abnormal weather," said Dai Yande, deputy director of the Energy
Research Institute affiliated to the National Development and Reform Commission.
Zhuang Jian, senior economist at the Asian
Development Bank in China, said increasing power generation facilities, a result
of the country's 586 billion U.S. dollars stimulus package initiated in
late 2008, would gradually help make up for the shortage.
Another reason for the current shortage is the
haggling over prices between power and coal companies, analysts said. "They must
be made more market-oriented to resolve differences over prices," Zhuang said.
Dai also urged a contingency mechanism be put in
place to tackle such weather-triggered power shortages.
Overall electricity consumption rose nearly 6 percent
in 2009 to 3,643 billion kilowatt-hours, the National Energy Administration said
in a statement on its website yesterday.
Coal-based thermal power plants generate about 90
percent of the country's supply.
(Source: China Daily)