China Daily

Cold families get some heat at last

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Heating has been supplied to almost 100,000 families that were still shivering in mid-December after falling through the cracks of energy conversion projects, according to the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection.

To cut concentrat­ions of PM2.5 — hazardous fine particulat­e matter — Beijing and Tianjin, along with 26 cities in Hebei, Shanxi, Shandong and Henan provinces were urged to use natural gas or electricit­y for heating this winter.

However, as the heating season began, some people in those areas found their homes and schools freezing, mainly due to gas shortages or incomplete energy conversion projects.

From Dec 15 to 20, inspectors went door-to-door and found some 96,000 families that still had no heat on Dec 15, including in Hebei, where temperatur­es have dropped as low as -10 C.

Local government­s have now managed to ensure that all households in the area have been able to stay warm, either through a greater gas supply, coal-fueled heating or electric heaters, according to the ministry.

Before the inspection­s began, local authoritie­s had helped 330,000 households keep warm by allocating more gas or providing provisiona­l heating equipment, the ministry said.

It told local authoritie­s in November to “ensure a warm winter” for the public and ordered areas with incomplete conversion projects to use coal or any other available fuel.

Last month, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, the top economic planner, ordered Beijing to restart coal-fueled generators to reduce natural gas consumptio­n.

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