China fires power generating capacity
News Archive - Coal & Electric Power -September news )

(Shanghai Daily, Sep 04, 2006) CHINA boosted its power generation capacity by 41.94 gigawatts in the first seven months, said sources with the National Development and Reform Commission.

A report on the official NDRC Website said new generation capacity in the period included 5.26 gw of hydropower and 36.5 gw of coal-fired power.

Statistics from the China Electricity Council show generation capacity exceeded 500 gw by the end of last year after rising by 66.02 gw for the whole year.

China's electricity demand and supply would level out later this year with a sharp rise in capacity, said Zhang Guobao, vice minister of the NDRC, in June. It is expected that 70 gw of new capacity will go into production this year.

The report said China consumed 1.57 trillion kilowatt-hours in the first seven months, with heavy industry claiming the sharpest growth in demand.

Consumption by the primary sector rose 6.61 percent from the same period of last year, the secondary sector jumped 13.84 percent, the service sector added 10.7 percent while domestic use gained 13.52 percent.

Industrial consumption rose 13.86 percent, with light industry up 10.1 percent and heavy industry 14.8 percent, said the report.

China generated over 1.52 trillion kilowatt-hours in the period, up 12.1 percent from the same period of last year.

Power supply from coal-fired generators rose 12.5 percent, while hydropower was up 11.2 percent, and nuclear power down 0.4 percent.

China needed to adjust its power generation structure in order to be less dependent on coal, Zhang has said.

The government would accelerate the closures of small coal-fired units that caused heavy pollution, taking out a total 15 million kw in the next five years.

The power industry had developed at a double-digit growth rate over the past four years, higher than the growth pace of the country's GDP.

By the end of 2004, China's capacity was 442 million kw, or 51 million kw more than in 2003.
Source:Shanghai Daily
tag:China energy