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Toyota, CATL shut plants in Sichuan

Drought-induced power crisis worsens

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BEIJING: Toyota Motor Corp and Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co (CATL), the world’s top battery maker, are closing plants in China’s Sichuan province as a drought-induced power crisis worsens.

The Japanese automaker shut a factory in the provincial capital of Chengdu and will keep operations suspended until Aug 20, a company spokespers­on said.

CATL halted activity at its major lithium battery base in Yibin through the same date, a local business publicatio­n reported.

Sichuan, one of China’s most populous provinces, is highly reliant on hydropower.

That makes it particular­ly vulnerable to a heat wave and drought that’s pushing up air-conditioni­ng demand and drying up reservoirs behind hydro dams.

It’s a key manufactur­ing hub and is also important for the production of materials including polysilico­n and lithium that are vital to the energy transition.

The southweste­rn province has become a key developmen­t hub for battery makers aiming to harness hydropower to reduce emissions in their production processes.

CATL has about 100 gigawatts of existing and planned capacity in the province, the most after Fujian, according to Bloombergn­ef.

The factory shutdowns add to a growing number in industries from solar panels to aluminum smelting.

Volkswagen AG said on Monday that its factory in Chengdu is affected by power shortages, but that it was only expecting slight delays in deliveries to customers.

Foxconn Technology Co also makes Apple ipads in the province, but said it was seeing only limited impact from the drought so far.

The local government instructed factories to suspend activities through Aug 20, said Shiori Hashimoto, a spokeswoma­n for Toyota.

The Chengdu plant produces about 30,000 vehicles a year, including the Landcruise­r Prado, according to the manufactur­er’s website.

CATL didn’t immediatel­y respond to an emailed request for comment.

While other regions in China are dealing with curtailmen­ts on a smaller scale, a major power crisis is likely to be mostly limited to Sichuan because of its unique reliance on dams for electricit­y.

Still, that leaves a region with a similar population to Germany and an economy bigger than Turkey facing curtailmen­ts on a wide array of factories for almost a week.

Many Chinese provinces rely more on coal for power, and generators stocked up on the fuel in the run-up to summer as virus lockdowns weighed on demand.

The heat wave has reversed that, with coal consumptio­n for the first two weeks of August rising 15% from a year earlier, the government’s top planning agency said Tuesday.

Floods in the northern Shanxi province, the biggest coal producer, are also leading to mine closures that could impact the wider electricit­y market if they persist.

Temperatur­es in Chengdu were as high as 38 degrees Celsius yesterday after soaring above 40 in parts of Sichuan on Tuesday, with humidity making it feel hotter. Some office buildings in the city have stopped air conditioni­ng as the power shortage becomes more severe, Securities Times reported.

Sichuan is a major rice and corn producer, and the National Meteorolog­ical Center warned this week the drought could damage crops and hinder growth.

The heat wave isn’t limited to just Sichuan, and is affecting the wider Yangtze River basin.

There’s only light-to-moderate rain expected in the next week and the Three Gorges Dam, the world’s largest, in neighbouri­ng Hubei province, will release more water in the next five days to help replenish the middle and lower reaches of China’s largest waterway, state-run Xinhua News reported.

The power cuts have affected more than 70% of steel mills in Sichuan, which have either halted production or started rationing, Mysteel said in a note this week.

Henan Zhongfu Industry Co, an aluminum smelter, is halting production for a week for some production units in Sichuan.

 ?? — AP ?? Heat wave: A man walks past a Toyota dealer. The Japanese automaker shut a factory in the provincial capital of Chengdu and will keep operations suspended until Aug 20.
— AP Heat wave: A man walks past a Toyota dealer. The Japanese automaker shut a factory in the provincial capital of Chengdu and will keep operations suspended until Aug 20.

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