China Daily (Hong Kong)

Power demand increases in Q1 as economy firms

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s electricit­y consumptio­n, an important indicator of economic activity, rose significan­tly during the first quarter of this year, as the service sector played a bigger role in driving the economy, the country’s energy authority said on Tuesday.

Power consumptio­n rose 9.8 percent to 1.6 trillion kilowatt-hours in the first three months, a quarterly record high since 2012, up 4.1 percentage points compared with the fourth quarter of last year, data released by the National Energy Administra­tion showed.

The record growth was due to the strong economic performanc­e during the first quarter as well as the robust service sector that drove the upturn in power use, said Li Fulong, head of the Developmen­t Planning Department of the NEA.

China’s economy grew 6.8 percent in the first quarter of 2018, slightly faster than expected, buoyed by strong consumer demand and surprising­ly robust property investment.

Supply-side structural reform and new growth momentum have all contribute­d to the growth in power consumptio­n and there has also been a trend of slower power use in traditiona­l energy-consuming sectors and increasing power demand from the service sectors, he said.

Service sector electricit­y consumptio­n rose 16.7 percent during the period, followed by a 10.3 percent increase for the agricultur­al sector and 6.7 percent for the industrial sector. Residentia­l power use was up 17.2 percent, and solar and wind energy increased 58.7 percent and 37.9 percent respective­ly.

Joseph Jacobelli, a senior

We expect that for the full year the increase should average about 6 percent.”

Joseph Jacobelli,

analyst of Asian utilities at Bloomberg, said the shift away from industrial use to commercial and residentia­l use, which has been going on for a few years already, should steadily continue.

It is likely that in one or two decades industrial usage of electricit­y as a percentage of the total will fall to below 50 percent, he said.

According to Jacobelli, the cold snap also contribute­d to the record high power consumptio­n, especially during the first two months.

“Consumptio­n shot up 13.3 percent in the first two months of 2018 chiefly due to unusual weather conditions,” he said.

“We expect that for the full year the increase should average about 6 percent.”

According to the administra­tion, China’s energy mix has also continued to improve, with the accelerati­on of a greener growth and a low-carbon model.

While petroleum consumptio­n growth remains at a low-speed, China’s natural gas consumptio­n witnessed rapid growth, which totaled 71.2 billion cubic meters during the first quarter, a yearon-year growth of 9.8 percent.

Urban gas usage witnessed a year-on-year increase of 23 percent and chemical gas consumptio­n decreased 15 percent year-on-year, it said.

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