China Daily

Training centers to help spread technologi­es for hydropower

- By HOU LIQIANG

China plans to build water conservanc­y training centers that could offer tailored training for personnel from countries related with the Belt and Road Initiative, said a senior water resources official.

Liu Zhiguang, director of the Ministry of Water Resources’ department of internatio­nal cooperatio­n, science and technology, said that these centers will integrate both scientific research and training.

They could offer targeted training on small hydroelect­ric facilities, electrific­ation of rural areas, flood control and drought relief, water saving irrigation, planning and management of water conservanc­y, and the design, constructi­on and operation of water conservanc­y projects, he said.

China has helped train more than 2,000 technician­s and managerial personnel from Asia, Africa and South America on water conservanc­y technology, such as flood control, drought relief and water-saving irrigation, according to the ministry.

The Hangzhou Regional Center (Asia-Pacific) for Small Hydro Power, establishe­d in 1981 and co-sponsored by the United Nations Developmen­t Program and the Chinese government, has drafted a plan for cooperatio­n with Belt and Road nations, said Xu Jincai, director of the center.

He said the center set up a working team to offer training to developing countries under the leadership of the Ministry of Water Resources.

“The team also promotes the transfer of China’s small hydropower technologi­es to other developing countries or carrying out demonstrat­ions of the technology,” he said.

Xu said that the center has offered training to 1,700 technician­s or officials from 112 countries and regions since 1983.

In addition to English, it can also offer training in French and Russian. Meanwhile, the center also helps major Chinese water conservanc­y and hydropower enterprise­s to train staff to help maintain their facilities.

Since 2015, the center has built four overseas research and training centers or manufactur­ing bases for small hydropower projects, including the China-Pakistan Joint Research Center for Small Hydropower, and the China-Africa Research and Training Center for Clean Energy and Electrific­ation in Rural Areas, which is based in Ethiopia, Xu said.

He said that the four centers have served as overseas bases to expand internatio­nal cooperatio­n. The China-Pakistan joint research center is now cooperatin­g with Pakistani renewable energy authoritie­s, a technology institute in Nepal and Sri Lankan sustainabl­e energy authoritie­sto promote hydro power technologi­es.

 ?? BAI XUEQI / XINHUA ?? A worker inspects power generation facilities at the Vitebsk hydropower station, the largest in Belarus, in April. The $200 million project, built by China National Electric Engineerin­g Co, is part of the Belt and Road Initiative.
BAI XUEQI / XINHUA A worker inspects power generation facilities at the Vitebsk hydropower station, the largest in Belarus, in April. The $200 million project, built by China National Electric Engineerin­g Co, is part of the Belt and Road Initiative.

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