China plans to pour a record 70 billion yuan (US$8.4 billion) into
a five-year program aimed at upgrading small-scale hydropower
stations built in 400 counties.
The move is aimed at boosting rural economies, providing basic
amenities to residents and slashing pollution from burning wood or
fossil fuels.
Most of the stations are located in western hinterlands which have
been cut off from mains supplies so far.
Up
to 30 percent of the total funds allocated to the project is
expected to come from the State with the rest being raised by local
authorities set to benefit from the electrification program, water
chiefs announced Wednesday.
The program -- approved by the State Council -- is a ``strategic
measure to solve the regions' underdeveloped economy and worsening
ecosystems caused by chronic poverty,'' Wang Shucheng, minister of
water resources said Wednesday in Beijing at a national
conference.
It
is hoped the program will benefit nearly 200 million rural
residents with 85 percent of them living in western regions, said
Zhang Youcai, vice-minister of finance.
Since the 1980s, China has turned to small hydropower stations with
installed capacity of up to 50,000 kilowatts to deliver electricity
to millions of rural households.
The ambitious rural electrification (RE) strategy succeeded in
giving 653 counties key power supplies by the end of 2000 with
hydropower delivered to most rural households, said Chen Lei,
vice-minister of water resources.
China is expected to upgrade 400 of them as medium-stage RE
counties by 2005, Chen confirmed.
The electricity will enable households to use lighting and basic
appliances while also boosting the rural economy through the
development of township enterprises and by-product processing.
Annually, 5.6 million hectares of forests were burned by about 112
million rural people for heating and cooking for the lack of
electricity, according to statistics released by the ministry. This
not only destroyed local ecosystems but also seriously polluted the
environment.
China's total exploitable hydropower potential is estimated to be
about 87 million kilowatts, ranking it the largest in the
world.
Small hydropower stations produce about 80 billion kilowatt-hours
annually, supplying electricity for one-third of the country's
counties and one-fourth of its total population. It is the
equivalent in power of consuming 30 million tons of standard
coal.
This means at least 300 million rural people have access to power
so far.
Only 29 percent of China's hydropower resources have been
exploited, far less than in some developed countries. On the other
hand, around 75 million rural people have still no access to
power.
(China
Daily November 22, 2001)