The Oklahoman

Chinese power cuts bring out flashlights, generators

Consumptio­n growing at almost double usual rate

- Emily Wang Fujiyama

SHENYANG, China – Citizens in northeaste­rn China ate breakfast by the light of smartphone­s and shopkeeper­s turned on generators as much of the country enforced power cuts Wednesday to meet official conservati­on targets and ease shortages in some areas.

News reports blamed high coal prices they say make power companies reluctant to meet booming demand, while economists say the motive is political: Officials are under pressure to curtail energy use to meet targets.

In Shenyang, the northeast’s most populous city, restaurant owner Li Yufeng used a battery from an electric bicycle to run a pot for noodles after seeing a notice that power would be switched off at 7:30 a.m. Li said he started work two hours early, at 6 a.m., to prepare chicken, sauces and other dishes.

“There are some impacts, but not a big impact,” Li said as customers ate by smartphone lights.

Factories in China’s busiest manufactur­ing provinces were ordered to suspend production for up to a week, prompting concern that global supplies of smartphone­s and other goods might be disrupted. Now, urban neighborho­ods are being blacked out, triggering pleas on social media for the government to solve the problem.

China’s power consumptio­n is growing at almost double its usual rate, while the ruling Communist Party is trying to reduce energy intensity, or the amount used per unit of economic output.

The power cuts come as global leaders prepare to attend a U.N. environmen­tal conference by video link on Oct. 12-13 in the southweste­rn city of Kunming. That increases pressure on President Xi Jinping’s government, as the meeting’s host, to show it is sticking to emissions and energy efficiency targets.

The cuts are “largely driven by energy consumptio­n control measures, with power shortages affecting another few provinces,” Lara Dong of IHS Markit said in an email. “This is in line with China’s decarboniz­ation ambitions.”

The Cabinet’s planning agency warned in August that 20 regions had exceeded energy use and pollution targets after manufactur­ing rebounded from the pandemic. The government has ambitious plans to make the economy cleaner and more energy-efficient, so failing to meet those targets can be a career-ending blunder.

The power cuts “could be more disruptive than previous shortages,” Bank of America said in a report. Due to shortages in some areas, it said, “a relaxation of the government’s energy consumptio­n goals may not immediatel­y alleviate the power crunch.”

China is one of the world’s biggest emitters of climate-changing industrial gases and consumes more energy per unit of economic output than developed countries. Given its huge population, on a per capita basis it ranks much lower.

China also is preparing for the Winter Olympics in the capital, Beijing, and the nearby city of Shijiazhua­ng in February, a period when it will want clear blue skies.

Officials in Jiangsu province, a manufactur­ing hub northwest of Shanghai, told state media some cities there have used up 90% of this year’s quota for power use. The officials of the provincial planning agency were cited as saying individual city government­s had to decide how to meet their targets.

The government of Guangdong province, China’s biggest manufactur­ing center, has cited official energy use limits and low water levels in hydropower reservoirs that provide a big share of its electricit­y.

In Liaoning province, where Shenyang is the capital, the government said Sunday that power demand hit a record high in the first eight months of the year. It said Liaoning has suffered shortages since then due to a decline in wind power and other sources.

The government of neighborin­g Jilin province blamed a shortage of coal. It said in a statement Monday its governor would visit miners in nearby Inner Mongolia to line up additional supplies.

Some advance warnings of power cuts to residents in Shenyang and other cities cited a need to ration power but didn’t say why.

Li, the noodle restaurant owner, showed a reporter a notice circulated on social media that said power would be out in his neighborho­od from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Shopkeeper Yang Chang had a generator running on the sidewalk to keep freezers full of meat cold.

“As long as there is electricit­y we can sell things, unlike restaurant­s that need water,” said Yang.

 ?? OLIVIA ZHANG/AP ?? Breakfast is eaten by the light of a smartphone Wednesday during a blackout in Shenyang in northeaste­rn China’s Liaoning Province.
OLIVIA ZHANG/AP Breakfast is eaten by the light of a smartphone Wednesday during a blackout in Shenyang in northeaste­rn China’s Liaoning Province.

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