The story appears on

Page A6

November 26, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Nation

Xinjiang to boost power grid with huge investment

In the next five years, northwest China’s Xinjiang region will invest 200 billion yuan (US$31 billion) in building power grids to connect the region to the country’s east, Pakistan and central Asian countries.

Resources-rich Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, the core area for the Silk Road Economic Belt, will create power transmission lines by 2020 as it builds the “Power Silk Road,” said a source with the Xinjiang Electric Power Company under the State Grid Corp of China.

The grid projects are an important infrastructure plan for the region, guaranteeing power supply for local residents and enterprises in Xinjiang, said the company.

Chinese President Xi Jinping told the UN Sustainable Development Summit in September that China proposes discussing a global energy network to meet global power demand with clean and green alternatives.

To build a global energy network coincides with the trend for low-carbon, efficient and balanced energy distribution, said Zhao Qingbo, an analyst with the State Grid.

Clean energy like solar and wind power must be integrated into grids to realize large-scale development, said Zhao.

Xinjiang’s energy network will also help narrow development gaps between different regions, he added.

China began to purchase electricity from Russia in 1992. Currently, Heilongjiang Province in northeast China has four operating power transmission lines connecting Russia.

This year, the Heilongjiang Electric Power Company will import 3.6 billion kilowatt-hours of power from Russia, or 5.4 percent of the power sold in the province.

“China and Russia both benefit from the commercial power cooperation,” Li Changlin, the company’s deputy general manger, said.

The implementation of the Belt and Road Initiative will push the interconnection of grids in Asia, said Liu Xiaosheng, a professor of electric engineering at the Harbin Institute of Technology in Heilongjiang.

The China-proposed initiative refers to a trade and infrastructure network connecting Asia to Europe and Africa through the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road.

Liu Zhenya, president of the State Grid, said the country will accelerate grid interconnectivity with neighboring countries such as Russia, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Myanmar, Laos, Nepal and Thailand in the coming decade.

He estimated that the global energy network will be basically completed by 2050.

It is estimated that from 2016 to 2030, China’s annual investment in clean energy and related infrastructure projects will grow to 820 billion yuan, according to Liu.

By the end of 2020, China aims to increase non-fossil energy to about 15 percent of the total primary energy consumption and raise the share of renewable energy in production.

In 2020, China’s installed hydro, wind and solar power capacity will reach 350 million, 240 million and 100 million kw, mainly in the west and north regions. The current operating capacity is about 482 million kW in China.

Transnational grids already operate in Europe, North America and Southern Africa.

Global energy network construction faces some practical problems such as the high cost of clean energy in the short run, huge investment and operating models in the field, according to industry analysts.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend