Economic powerhouse Guangdong Province is likely to see the end of power
supply shortages this year.
"The year 2007 will be a turning point for
power supply in Guangdong. The province will have increasingly adequate power
supply from this year on," said Huang Jianjun, a senior executive with Guangdong
Power Grid Corp.
Huang's upbeat analysis is based on the operation of
several new massive power generation projects in the province, greater power
supply from the nation's western regions, and provincial authorities' endeavors
to lower power consumption by adjusting the industrial structure.
In
addition to the projects involving power generation units of 2,970 megawatts
that have recently gone into operation, a batch of other projects involving
power generation units of 12,000 megawatts will become operational in the
province later this year, 8,595 megawatts of which are expected to begin
operation before summer, the peak period for power consumption, he
said.
And the power supply from the western regions of Guizhou, Yunnan
and Guangxi is expected to surpass 14,000 megawatts this year, an increase of 20
percent from 2006. "That means the power shortfall in the province will be
solved essentially in 2007," he said.
Official statistics indicate that
Guangdong was short 4,500 megawatts of power supply in 2006.
He said that
the province's efforts to lower power consumption by adjusting the industrial
structure will also help to relieve pressure on the power
supply.
Guangdong aims to lower energy consumption per 10,000 yuan gross
domestic product by 16 percent by 2010 and the target for this year is a
reduction of 4 percent.
The province has been highlighting high-tech
industries, encouraging independent innovation and generally speeding up the
development of the tertiary industry.
And it has placed controls on
heavy power-consuming industries and encouraged existing enterprises to revamp
equipment using power-saving devices.
At a forum held late last year in
Guangzhou, Chen Shanru, director-general of the Guangdong Reform and Development
Commission, said that the power generation units in Guangdong will reach 60,000
megawatts by 2010, a year-on-year growth of 15 percent from the 40,000 megawatts
in 2006.
Chen said that the province would invest generously in
power-related projects with an emphasis on clean power generation units in the
11th Five-Year Plan (2006-10).
The province's investment in power grid
projects is budgeted at 125 billion yuan between 2006 and 2010, while the budget
for nuclear power projects alone is set at 73.9 billion yuan, for the
second-phase nuclear power project in Ling'ao, and the initial-phase nuclear
power projects in Yangjiang and Taishan.
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