The year 2006 will see the end of electricity supply shortages,
providing an opportunity to deepen reforms towards a more
market-based power industry, top-level industry authorities said
yesterday.
The generating capacity of China's electricity-producing
facilities is expected to reach at least 570 gigawatts by the end
of the year, enough to meet the growing power demand driven by the
world's fastest-growing major economy, said Zhang Guobao,
vice-minister of the country's top economic policy planner, the
National Development and Reform Commission.
Zhang, speaking at a power conference hosted by the China
Electricity Council (CEC) over the weekend, said that wide-spread
brownouts will be unlikely this year.
"This marks a turning point in the electricity supply shortfalls
of a few years ago," Zhang said.
Industry leaders said the improved power industry, which is
expecting a supply surplus in certain areas within the next few
years, provides a "hard-won" opportunity for the sector to deepen
reforms in the move towards making the industry more market-based
and set it on the track of sustainable development.
Zhang said more facilities fuelled by hydro, nuclear and
renewable sources are to be installed, and small, insufficient and
air-polluting coal-fired units will be closed.
The power industry's reliance on coal is expected to be reduced
to 70.2 percent in 2010, from last year's 75.6 percent, said Wang
Jianping, president of China Power Engineering Consulting (Group)
Corp.
Zhang said the government will improve the legal system for
China's power industry by amending the existing electricity law and
coming up with more effective regulations.
Wang Yonggan, secretary-general of CEC, the industry consortium
of China's electricity producers, said the government should
streamline the electricity pricing mechanism, taking advantage of
new opportunities.
"The government should introduce a system that will pass the
high fuel costs to end users, otherwise electricity producers will
suffer severe losses as fuel prices fluctuate," the
secretary-general told a press briefing on Saturday.
Last year, the profit of China's coal produced electricity
increased by only 2 percent, even though it generated 12.8 percent
more electricity than in 2004. This is because coal prices are kept
high while the cost of electricity is capped by the government.
China has suffered from severe power shortages since 2002 as
electricity demand has grown by an average 13 per cent annually
over the past three and a half years. This is driven by the
accelerating growth of many energy-guzzling sectors such as steel
and aluminium.
The situation will greatly improve within the next five years,
as new power generating facilities are commissioned and government
efforts to develop a more energy-efficient society begins to pay
off.
New power generation units with a total capacity of at least 70
gigawatts are expected to come on line within the next five years,
leading to an assembled generating capacity of 750 gigawatts by
2010, said Wang Yonggan.
On the demand side, power consumption is expected to rise to
3.45 trillion kilowatt-hours in the next five years, an annual
growth of 6.75-7.0 percent, much slower than the increase of at
least 10 percent during the past five years, said Wang
Jianping.
Wang Jianping said the slow-down in power demand originates from
the government efforts to curb over-investment in energy-intensive
sectors like steel and machinery and encourage the service and
high-tech IT industries.
(China Daily February 20, 2006)