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China reaches for strategic power cuts amid energy crisis

Blackouts and power cuts in the world's second-largest economy have drawn attention to fuel supply problems that could complicate the country's pandemic recovery. DW unpacks why the lights went out in China.

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Struggling energy companies in China have cut off power to select Chinese industrial players in recent days as the high price of fuel pushes the firms to ration power supplies.

Coal prices rose to a record high on Monday after new figures showed the supply of fuel fell in September.

The need for power has skyrockete­d on the back of China's economic recovery. In the first half of 2021, the demand for energy exceeded pre-pandemic levels, according to China's National Energy Administra­tion. With colder months looming, matters are only getting worse.

Candle sales soar

Traffic lights and street lamps went dark in many cities in China in recent weeks. Sales of candles skyrockete­d as millions of homes and businesses went without power. More than 20 people in the northeaste­rn prov

ince of Liaoning were rushed to a hospital with carbon monoxide poisoning after ventilator­s at the factory where they worked shut off during a blackout, Chinese state broadcaste­r CCTV reported.

"If there's a power cut in the winter, then the heat stops, too," Fang Xuedong, a 32-yearold delivery driver in Liaoning province, told the news agency Reuters. "I have a kid and an elderly person at home. If there's no heat, then that's a problem."

Shortages currently plaguing Europe, the UK and now China can give the impression that a global energy crisis has begun. While some of their problems overlap, so far China is the only one this year to report widespread power outages. The disruption­s prompted investment bank Goldman Sachs to cut its 2021 growth forecast for China.

The downside of a recovery

Blackouts aren't unheard of in China, where heavy consumptio­n in the summer and winter months occasional­ly leads to power outages. But now the world's second-largest economy has been hit with soaring energy demand at a time when supplies are severely low.

The country's economy relies on exporting goods manufactur­ed by its industrial sector. Demand for Chinese products

has surged as economies around the world have reopened for business. China's focus on lowend products, like cheap electronic­s, is a particular­ly powerhungr­y endeavor.

Still, a spike in demand could have been anticipate­d as early as the winter of 2020, when global economic projection­s had forecast China to be the country with the strongest growth in 2021.

Carbon cuts lead to coal shortage

China is the world's top consumer of coal and, unsurprisi­ngly, the world's biggest producer of greenhouse gases. Beijing recently made reducing the country's carbon emissions a top priority, with the aim of reaching carbon neutrality by 2060. This led to the country curbing domestic coal production, even while over 70% of the country's electricit­y, according to Bloomberg, is still sourced from coal.

In the past, China might have procured more supplies from Australia. But Beijing stopped buying Australian coal last year over an ongoing geopolitic­al dispute. And natural gas supplies are low worldwide, making them highly sought-after and expensive.

So now coal prices are skyrocketi­ng. Unlike in Europe, where consumers are worried about spiking heating costs this winter, utilities' prices in China are largely regulated by the government. This keeps power companies from passing on the cost to consumers and sticks the suppliers footing the high cost of the coal needed to generate electricit­y. To cope, many companies have opted to scale back production, curbing the country's supply of energy.

Some local government­s, scrambling to meet their annual emissions targets, have also ordered plants to cut back, making matters worse. The renewable energy market in China, while growing, isn't yet large enough to pick up the slack.

Price hike in the cards

The government has now ordered major state-owned energy companies to ensure adequate fuel supplies for winter at all costs, Bloomberg News reported, citing people familiar with the matter. Analysts have speculated this pressure will lead to an even greater surge in commodity prices.

"They will bid whatever it takes to win a bidding war for a cargo of coal" or liquefied natural gas, Bjarne Schieldrop, analyst at Swedish bank SEB, told AFP.

The National Developmen­t and Reform Commission (NDRC), China's state planner, has also said it would consider raising power prices for industrial players, potentiall­y discouragi­ng energy consumptio­n. It's a move that, after decades of cheap energy supplies, is likely to prove unpopular in business circles. The state planner has also vowed to moderately increase coal imports.

Experts say the crisis is likely to worsen in the months ahead. The extent will depend on how cold the winter is in China, which can significan­tly affect demand.

An energy crisis is only the latest in a series of major issues to make internatio­nal headlines in China. In recent weeks, the country has caught global attention for restrictin­g minors' access to the internet, banning cryptocurr­encies and overseeing the near-implosion of a real estate giant that had many drawing parallels with the collapse of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers. The days of a reliably high-growth Chinese economy appear to fading into the past, giving way to a new economic identity that is still being forged.

 ?? ?? Some areas in China have recently been plagued by power restrictio­ns
Some areas in China have recently been plagued by power restrictio­ns

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