The country's biggest electricity grid company, the State Grid
Corp of China, yesterday said it planned to spend up to 20 billion
yuan (US$2.5 billion) over the next five years to improve the power
transmission network in rural areas.
"The project is in line with the central government's new
countryside scheme and will benefit millions of farmers in poor
areas, especially in the west, which suffers from harsh
environmental conditions," Liu Zhenya, president of State Grid,
said yesterday.
The Chinese Government has rolled out an ambitious plan to build
a "new socialist countryside" in order to improve the living
standards of China's 745 million rural residents. The topic was
discussed during the nation's National People's Congress.
State Grid, whose business covers about 88 percent of China's
territory, aims to invest around 1 trillion (US$123 billion) in
total for various projects to enhance the country's electricity
networks by the year 2010, Liu said.
Beijing-headquartered State Grid is the bigger of China's two
electricity distributors, with the other being Guangzhou-based
China South Grid, which supplies electricity to 5 provinces in the
south.
The investment may come from the company's own capital, bank
loans and state bonds, a company official, who declined to be
named, said earlier. But he did not give further details.
State Grid aims to connect every household with the electricity
network within its business reach by 2010.
Currently about 1.4 million households, or 6 million people, in
rural areas live without electricity supplies.
Within the next five years, the company plans to build
electricity transmission lines linking the main power grid with
about 1.2 million households, which are concentrated in western
areas, such as the Tibet Autonomous Region, the Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region and Qinghai Province.
The remaining 200,000 households will be connected to separate
power generators fuelled by small hydro projects, wind farms or
solar power plants because it may be too difficult and technically
unviable to construct power supply lines in those areas.
Liu said the cost of improving the power network in villages
would be split 50-50 between State Grid and local governments.
"It is a project beyond money, it is a scheme that will benefit
the country in the long run - we, as a state-owned company, should
take responsibility," Liu said.
"But it will be an arduous task," the president added.
For Tibet alone, Liu said, the company will have to invest about
8 billion yuan (US$986 million) to provide electricity to 160,000
remote households.
Liu said his company also planned to spend about 90 million yuan
(US$11 million) over the next five years training electricians in
rural areas so they can carry out maintenance.
(China Daily March 28, 2006)