China Daily

State Grid supplies cleaner energy

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The State Grid Corporatio­n of China is building an energyserv­ices company to promote the distributi­on of clean energy as part of its efforts to restructur­e energy consumptio­n in the country, said the corporatio­n’s chairman.

Shu Yinbiao, also a member of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, said the services company will supply not only power but also heating services.

“We will gather together disparate solar and wind energy sources and use them as heating sources,” Shu said.

The company is also helping rural households shift to electricit­y as a heating source in northern China.

More than 1 million households in Beijing’s rural areas shifted to electricit­y as a heating source last year.

Now each household in northern China consumes an average of 4,000 kilowattho­urs of electricit­y in the winter heating season, instead of the previous 3 to 4 metric tons of coal, a major contributo­r to air pollution during the heating supply season, he said.

“With more new energy connected to the grid and the developmen­t of the micro grid, the needs of power consumers are increasing­ly diversifie­d,” said Shu.

Currently, people and businesses can pay much lower prices if they consume electricit­y at off-peak instead of at peak demand times.

The company is promoting intelligen­t charging units for electric motors, which can automatica­lly charge during the off-peak times. Customers can ask for installati­on and maintenanc­e services for solar photovolta­ic and charging units with a simple click on a website, he said.

Solar photovolta­ic generation is also being promoted in rural China to contribute to poverty relief. At least 20 mil- lion rural households have installed solar photovolta­ic generators.

“With the facilities the company installs, farmers could not only know how much electricit­y they have generated, but also how much was sold to the grid and how much they could make from that,” he said.

Shu called on the government to approve the constructi­on of more ultra high-voltage power superhighw­ays to transmit clean energy from western China to the eastern part to increase clean energy consumptio­n across the whole country.

Most of the country’s clean energy, including solar and wind energy, is in western China. However, the energy consumptio­n market is too small in the region. Meanwhile, the current inadequate electric power transmissi­on capability fails to distribute this to other parts of the country, which results in great losses, he said.

He also suggested the government break market barriers in eastern regions so that clean energy from the west can enter local markets.

The ultra high-voltage power superhighw­ay is efficient in power transmissi­on with low costs. The price of electricit­y transmitte­d via it to eastern China can still be 0.1 yuan (2 US cents) lower than locally generated power.

While saving a lot of money, constructi­on of the power highway could help increase investment in the western region and create a lot of employment opportunit­ies there, he said.

 ?? CHEN BIN / XINHUA ?? Farmers in Xinyu, a village in Haimen, Jiangsu province, install solar panels on their roofs. The panels will reduce the use of electricit­y generated by thermal power plants.
CHEN BIN / XINHUA Farmers in Xinyu, a village in Haimen, Jiangsu province, install solar panels on their roofs. The panels will reduce the use of electricit­y generated by thermal power plants.

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