China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Xinjiang’s Tacheng touting cleaner heating systems

- By LI HONGYANG lihongyang@chinadaily.com.cn

Elshinebal, a 50-year-old farmer in Tacheng, a city in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, used to burn coal for heating and cooking in his suburban bungalow and describes his coal-laden life back then as “dusty”.

In August 2019, he moved to a downtown apartment that uses a central heating system supported by an electric thermal storage device. The device collects electricit­y generated by a combinatio­n of wind, solar power and coal for heating, which he said has made his living environmen­t cleaner.

“In the past, I had to mop the floor, covered by coal dust, every day in my kitchen, where I had installed my personal coal boiler,” he said. “It was inevitable that sometimes dishes would get a little contaminat­ed by the black dust.

“Not far from my house, I could also see gray smoke from the chimneys of two public coal boilers that supported a neighborho­od. Transformi­ng a coal-heating system into an electric one can create a dustfree house and a clean surroundin­g environmen­t for us.”

Wang Yongming, a China General Nuclear Power Corporatio­n engineer, was responsibl­e for a heating project powered by electricit­y, mainly generated from wind, in Altay prefecture. It was the first of its kind in Xinjiang, and Wang told media outlet Tianshan.com in 2018 that for buildings heated by electricit­y in a 50,000-square-meter area during the cold season, the project can reduce the use of coal by 1,200 metric tons and cut carbon dioxide emissions by 3,100 tons, effectivel­y lowering air pollution.

Recent data from Tacheng city government showed that structures in Tacheng prefecture heated by electricit­y cover 1.21 million sq m, and no gas, water or solid waste pollutants are being discharged.

The community where Elshinebal — his full name in the Mongolian language — purchased his new apartment started to adopt the electric thermal storage devices in 2018.

Through a mobile phone applicatio­n, electricit­y company workers can adjust the temperatur­e of heating boilers in buildings remotely. Different from traditiona­l coal boilers, the device doesn’t need people on duty, the company said.

Elshinebal said he is no longer concerned about inconsiste­nt temperatur­es because the heat in his apartment is always stable.

“Now, my room temperatur­e remains at 20 C. When I lived in the bungalow, winter nights were a little colder than days because the fire would go out in the coal boiler while I was sleeping,” he said.

Moreover, he doesn’t have to pay more for the heating system because the electric thermal storage device collects power at night, when electricit­y is cheaper, over a 10-hour period, and the amount it collects is enough to provide heat for 24 hours.

During the city’s cold season, from October to April, Elshinebal pays about 2,200 yuan ($339) to heat his 100-sq-m apartment. At his former house, he used to pay more than 3,000 yuan to buy coal for heating during the period.

A private electricit­y company headquarte­red in Harbin, Heilongjia­ng province, set up and operates the project amid a campaign to promote electrical heating in Tacheng city. Heilongjia­ng is one of several provinces assigned by the central government to assist Xinjiang’s developmen­t by providing the region with necessary resources.

The company, which did not want to be named, said that it is expanding its adoption of wind energy in Tacheng city to better power the electric thermal storage devices together with coal.

The campaign aims to reduce pollutants from various sources, including heating devices and vehicles, by improving electricit­y consumptio­n in the city’s energy consumptio­n structure and enlarging the proportion of renewable energy in electricit­y generation.

China will strive to hit peak carbon dioxide emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060, President Xi Jinping announced at the United Nations Summit on Biodiversi­ty in September.

At the Climate Ambition Summit, which concluded in December, Xi said, “Guided by our new developmen­t philosophy, we will promote greener economic and social developmen­t in all respects while pursuing high-quality developmen­t.”

Hao Haohong, a senior Tacheng prefecture government official in charge of energy and industry developmen­t, said that the quality of wind energy resources in the prefecture is good, but consumptio­n is a problem.

“Electricit­y volume that depends on wind speed is unreliable,” he explained. “The inconsiste­nt power cannot support agricultur­al or industrial production well, but it can be transforme­d and stored as heat energy and provide heating service.

Likening the heat storage device to a reservoir, he added that the device can also solve the wind energy waste problem because people use little electricit­y for production at night and most wind energy generated at night is not used.

By December, Tacheng prefecture had generated 2.5 billion kilowatt-hours from renewable energy, accounting for more than 30 percent of power generation in the area, the prefecture government said.

Tacheng prefecture’s developmen­t and reform commission plans to reduce the use of as many coal-fired boilers as possible in the area and switch to electric ones.

The commission said it will be harder to promote electric heating systems in old neighborho­ods and in suburbs due to renovation difficulti­es.

However, it added that electric heating and renewable energy will be a future trend and a major government task, and that it will create more models for surroundin­g counties and cities to follow.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A worker operates a control panel of a heating system powered by cleaner energy in Tacheng, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A worker operates a control panel of a heating system powered by cleaner energy in Tacheng, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

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