Power consumption surges amid lingering heat waves in China

Time:2023-07-17 17:50:24      Source:
Senior Chinese government officials have ramped up calls for the stability of power supplies, with key meetings and inspections being held, amid surging demand for electricity driven by the summer heat waves that have lasted for weeks.
 
Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang visited China Huaneng Group and State Grid Corp on Saturday and held meetings on how to do a better job in preparing for summer power consumption peaks, the Xinhua News Agency reported.
 
Ding called for more attention to be paid to key provinces and leading industries when it comes to securing power supplies and preventing outages.
 
In addition to securing electricity supplies, industry participants are urged to stabilize power rates while accelerating electricity production. Construction of new generating capacity should be facilitated.
 
An executive meeting of the State Council, China's cabinet, chaired by Premier Li Qiang on Friday, stressed ensuring energy and power supplies in summer.
 
Since June, electricity loads in many regions of China have repeatedly set new records. For example, as of July 12, South China's Hainan Province's accumulative power dispatch load hit a record high for the seventh time this year.
 
China's total electricity consumption amounted to 775.1 billion kilowatt-hours in June, up 3.9 percent year-on-year, the National Energy Administration said on Thursday.
 
If there is a long-term and large-scale extreme climate event, this year's national maximum power load may increase by 100 million kilowatts compared with 2022, the China Electricity Council (CEC) noted.
 
In response to surging demand, power companies have ramped up supplies. Data from the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission suggested that in the first half of this year, state-owned coal enterprises produced 560 million tons of coal, with an average daily output of 3.09 million tons, a year-on-year increase of 4.7 percent.
 
The CEC predicted that growth rate of China's power consumption in 2023 will hit 6 percent, and the national demand and supply will maintain a "tight balance."
 
Lin Boqiang, director of the China Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, told the Global Times on Sunday that the great emphasis from the top and the ramped-up efforts of power plants means that the stable supply of power is certain to be fulfilled.
 
More than 80 percent of China's power companies are state-owned, which provides for effective coordination, the expert said.
 
Despite the extreme weather conditions that have pushed up power demand, preparation is in place, particularly in terms of coal inventories. Coal is the major source of power production, so overall power supply should be in stable and secure, Lin said.
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Shuozhou 5200 680 0 FOR 05-04
Ordos 5500 700 0 ex-mine 05-04
Yulin 6200 780 0 ex-mine 05-04
Liulin Low-sulphur 900 0 ex-mine 05-04
Gujiao Low-sulphur 1770 -50 FOR 05-04
Xingtai Low-sulphur 2360 0 ex-Factory 05-04
Yangquan PCI 1280 -30 FOR 05-04
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Qinhuangdao 507.0 1.0 0.20 05-04
Caofeidian 541.0 9.0 1.69 05-04
Huanghua 216.9 12.4 6.06 05-04
Guangzhou 291.2 3.0 1.04 04-27
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North Ports 2697.8 53.0 2.00 02-01
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South Ports 2233.4 -216.0 -8.82 02-01
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