China Daily

State Grid ready to diversify operations overseas

- By ZHENG XIN

Beijing-based State Grid Corp of China is keeping an eye on the markets in Central and Eastern Europe, with a view to transferri­ng existing assets as well as investment opportunit­ies in new energy in the region.

“State Grid, which runs the majority of the nation’s electricit­y distributi­on networks, has no investment in the region so far, but will keep a watchful eye on the markets in Central and Eastern Europe,” said Wang Yimin, assistant general manager of State Grid.

“The company vows to speed up the building of a smart grid — to advance developmen­t of energy production and consumptio­n with internatio­nal peers for a better future,” he said.

According to internatio­nal market analysis company Research and Markets, the smart grid market in Central and Eastern Europe represents $28.6 billion of investment over the next 10 years.

Power infrastruc­ture in many parts of Central and Eastern Europe is outdated and not compatible with a fully integrated European power market. The electricit­y market in the region presents opportunit­ies to invest in smart grid infrastruc­ture in the process of upgrading their grids, the analysis company said.

Many countries in the region will deploy other advanced smart grid infrastruc­ture such as distributi­on automation, home area networks, distributi­on of renewable sources of generation, and electric vehicle charging infrastruc­ture, it said.

According to Joseph Jacobelli, a senior analyst of Asian utilities at Bloomberg, as the world’s largest renewable energy market, China is at the forefront of renewable energy, while State Grid’s strong balance sheets will drive it to diversify its operations overseas.

With the government supporting overseas expansion, many Chinese electricit­y firms are motivated to acquire power asset overseas, he said.

“State Grid, with its extensive experience in grid infrastruc­ture and integratin­g renewable energy into power systems, is dedicated to the interconne­ction of world power infrastruc­ture to realize efficient, clean and sustainabl­e developmen­t of global energy,” Wang said.

According to the China Electric Power Planning & Engineerin­g Institute, the separation of generation from transmissi­on in most countries in Central and Eastern Europe has been basically completed. Deregulati­on of power generation, distributi­on and sales is also being promoted, which is similar to the institutio­nal reform of the electricit­y sector in China.

State Grid, with total assets of 3.8 trillion yuan ($589 billion) and electricit­y sales reaching 3.9 trillion kilowatt-hours annually, has invested some 150 billion yuan in the past eight years to boost the developmen­t of smart grid technologi­es, including ultra-high-voltage electricit­y transmissi­on, new energy technology, key technologi­es of the ±500kV flexible DC valve and DC circuit breakers.

It has also been investing in the research and developmen­t of intelligen­t substation­s, intelligen­t power distributi­on, smart power utilizatio­n and electric vehicle network platforms.

The company has invested $19.5 billion in markets outside the Chinese mainland so far, including the acquisitio­n of a 25 percent stake in Portugal’s national power grid Redes Energética­s Nacionais, a 35 percent stake in Italian energy grid unit Cassa Depositi e Prestiti Reti, as well as the purchase of a 24 percent stake in Greece’s power grid operator, ADMIE, owned by the Public Power Corp, which owns, runs and maintains the power transmissi­on network across Greece.

State Grid ... is dedicated to the interconne­ction of world power infrastruc­ture to realize efficient, clean and sustainabl­e developmen­t of global energy.”

Wang Yimin, assistant general manager of the State Grid Corp of China

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong