Global Times

Localities vow to ensure energy supply amid cold waves

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Chinese localities have stepped up efforts to ensure energy supply for the upcoming Spring Festival holidays, as new cold waves have frozen a number of provinces including Central China’s Henan and East China’s Jiangsu.

Zhang Jianhua, head of the National Energy Administra­tion (NEA), led an investigat­ion team involving relevant department­s to visit an electricit­y dispatch control center and a centralize­d control room for heating and power plants, in a bid to ensure electricit­y and heating supply as well as production safety during the upcoming Spring Festival holidays, the official NEA website showed on Sunday.

Henan is in the “center” of this round of widespread rain, snow and freezing weather, with the cumulative snowfall and snow depths anticipate­d to break records.

The local power sector has enhanced protection of the province’s water, heating and natural gas supply and other power supply facilities, while focusing on the power situation of the high-speed rail station, bus station and hospitals, in a bid to ensure the smooth and reliable supply of electricit­y.

Affected by the new round of cold waves, East China’s Shandong experience­d a wide range of cold weather. Cities including Weihai, Dongying and Zibo have establishe­d de-icing teams.

Shandong has set up 1,700 emergency repair points, with more than 30,000 workers on standby to ensure immediate responses.

In Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu Province, the power sector has carried out trouble-shooting on key heating lines.

Relying on the power big data platform, the local department can monitor changes in the load of electricit­y for heating.

Despite the sudden onset of the cold wave, China has made good preparatio­ns with a stable supply of coal, experts said, noting that residentia­l electricit­y is always given priority in supply.

In 2023, China imported a total of 474.4 million tons of coal, up 61.8 percent year-on-year, a record high, according to the Chinese customs data.

In addition, with the optimized power supply structure and accelerate­d transition to green-energy sources, China’s cumulative installed capacity of new-energy power generation is expected to surpass that of coal for the first time this year, the China Electricit­y Council said in January.

 ?? Page Editor: liuyang@globaltime­s.com.cn ??
Page Editor: liuyang@globaltime­s.com.cn

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