Rethinking foreign aid, restoring accountability, reinvigorating economies      
  Catalog » Campaigns » Mekong Utility Watch » China Southern Power Grid Company turns to Three Gorges and Hong Kong amid coal shortage           Register | Login | New Password | Logout
Home
  PI in the News
  Photo Gallery
  Publications
  Campaigns
  Newsletters
   
Click here to sign up for free Probe International newsletters
  Canada/US toggle
  Links
  Private archives
 Information
About Us
Contact Us
Reprint rights
[Back]
  China Southern Power Grid Company turns to Three Gorges and Hong Kong amid coal shortage
  January 16, 2008
   
Printer friendly
Email to a friend

China Southern Power Grid, owner and operator of power distribution networks in the country's southern provinces, will seek to buy more power from the Three Gorges dam and Hong Kong to plug a supply gap caused by the worst coal shortage in the southwestern region in five years, SCMP reported.

 

Southern Grid vice president, Xiao Peng, told SCMP that 10,300 MW of power plant capacity in the five southern provinces it covers were forced to shut down due to a lack of coal. A sharp jump in coal prices and Beijing's closure of small mines on safety concerns were largely to blame for the shortage, he said.

 

Another problem for Southern Grid was the severe drought in Yunnan, a key producer of hydropower. 

 

Southern Grid is planning to list on the Shanghai Stock Exchange but needs to improve its profitability first, Mr. Xiao said. The company posted a 'profit' of about 16 billion yuan last year, which is low considering it had nearly 300 billion yuan of assets as of the end of 2006.   

 

US$1 = 7.24 RMB

 
Comment on this article
 
   
   
   
Photo Gallery  
 
  The Nu River is one of only two major rivers in China that have not been dammed. (The other is the Yaluzangbu in Tibet.)  
Export Credit | Foreign Aid | Mekong Utility Watch | Mining | Odious Debts | Three Gorges Probe
copyright © 2006