Nation invests in coal exploration By Wang Ying (China Daily) Updated: 2006-06-20 08:55
A senior analyst with a State-owned bank disclosed that the country is
drafting regulations to introduce industry funds in China to finance big
projects relating to energy.
One such fund for industry investments based
in North China's Tianjin Municipality has already got government approval, with
another in Shanxi Province still in the pipeline, according to the
source.
In a bid to meet surging demand, the country is also highly
committed to alternative sources such as hydro, wind and natural gas, said
Xu.
Despite widespread criticism of building dams to generate electricity
along rivers, Xu remained firm that hydro power will be a major energy source to
meet China's increasing demand.
The country plans to build hydro power
facilities with a total capacity of about 246 GW (gigawatts) by 2020, about half
the nation's total installed capacity last year, Zhang Guobao, vice-minister of
the NDRC, said earlier.
"About 70 per cent of hydro resources in the west
haven't been utilized, and we should try to fill the gap," Xu said.
When
asked whether the government has stalled on a massive plan to import LNG
(liquefied natural gas) as global crude prices soar, Xu said China is still
pushing the LNG imports in "an orderly arrangement."
Zhai Guangming, a
senior expert with the nation's biggest oil producer PetroChina, said last month
that China would be able to produce 150 billion cubic metres (bcm) of natural
gas by 2020, and imports could reach as much as 90 bcm, almost half of which is
expected to come from LNG sources.
As for wind power, Xu said the country
is expected to have on-grid wind power facilities of 2,000 MW (megawatts) by the
end of this year, up from last year's 1,260 MW.
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