
Coal bulker terminal at the port of Qinhuangdao. (Copyright Greenpeace | Liu Feiyue)
Coal bulker terminal at the port of Qinhuangdao. (Copyright Greenpeace | Liu Feiyue)
China is better prepared to avoid any energy supply crisis even with
power demand forecast to continue to grow rapidly, authorities said.
A 10% lift in demand last year triggered a supply crunch in the
second half and caused widespread electricity shortages, prompting a
raft of government action to tame
surging fuel prices, secure imports and boost local production.
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The nation now has sufficient fuel supply to meet “reasonable
domestic demand,” the National Development and Reform Commission, the
county’s top economic planning agency, said Tuesday. A rush to
accelerate coal output in the final months of 2021 pushed annual
production to more than four billion tonnes, including a record December
haul.
Utilities have also secured more longer-term coal contracts to manage
price volatility, while gas suppliers are maintaining high inventories
and have been able to meet home heating needs so far this winter without
curbing flows to industrial users.
To support China’s adoption of wind and solar power, authorities will
speed up approvals for giant, cross-regional power transmission lines
and back the development of desert-based hubs for renewables, the NDRC
said. President Xi Jinping in October announced the first 100 GW of
projects in a desert build-out were already under construction.
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