Shanghai Daily

Blue skies up ahead as China takes green path

- (Xinhua)

AS China seeks to curb air pollution and win the battle for blue skies, more Chinese cities have switched from coal to geothermal heating during this year’s winter as part of their efforts to become “smokeless cities.”

“My family has replaced coal-fired boiler with geothermal heating this year,” said Sun Shujuan, a villager in Xiongxian County, northern Hebei Province. “Burning coal was dirty and tiring.”

Xiongxian, about 130 kilometers from Beijing, began exploiting its rich geothermal resources, a clean and sustainabl­e energy, in 2009. Now it provides geothermal heating to all its urban areas and is looking to expand in rural households.

“We have provided geothermal heating for about 6,000 households in Xiongxian’s 12 villages this year,” said Chen Menghui, deputy general manager of Sinopec Green Energy Geothermal Developmen­t Co.

The company, establishe­d in 2006, is a joint venture between Arctic Green Energy Corporatio­n of Iceland and Sinopec Star Co, a subsidiary of China Petrochemi­cal Corporatio­n (Sinopec), China’s largest geothermal developer.

“Compared with coal-fired boilers, geothermal heating can reduce carbon dioxide emissions by at least half,” Chen said.

“It is estimated that we can replace over 10,000 tons of coal and cut emissions of more than 40,000 tons of carbon dioxide this year in Xiongxian.”

He added that the cost of geothermal heating is about half that of natural gas.

Xiongxian is one of 10 Chinese cities where Sinopec has helped replace coal with geothermal energy, including cities in Shanxi, Shaanxi and Henan provinces.

The company now provides geothermal heating to an area of around 50 square kilometers, and it aims to increase that by 100 square kilometers by 2023 and help build a total of 20 “smokeless cities” nationwide.

“Local government­s are very willing to cooperate with us given the mounting pressure of environmen­tal protection,” Chen said.

China aims to have clean energy replace 74 million tons of coal and generate 50 percent of winter heating in northern China by 2019 , according to a plan released by Chinese government in 2017.

Rich in resources of geothermal energy, the country now has about 150 square kilometers of geothermal energy-fueled areas.

The areas that have access to geothermal heating or cooling are expected to hit 1,600 square kilometers by 2020.

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