Northeast China's Jilin Province will open its first power plant
using biological materials at the end of this year.
"With a total investment of 520 million yuan (US$67.35
million) and covering eight hectares, the plant will convert
300,000 tons of plant stalks into 300 million kilowatts of electric
power annually," said Wang Lingfang, chairman of the board of
Shandong Luneng Construction Group.
Construction of the Jilin Luneng Nongan Biology Power
Plant, a subsidiary of the Shandong Luneng Construction Group,
started on April 22.
Located in Nongan, one of the major grain production
counties in China, the annual output value of the power plant is
expected to be 220 million yuan (US$28.5 million).
"Our annual grain production is 2.5 million tons,
which accounts for 10 percent of the whole Jilin Province. Each
year, 7.5 million tons of stalks are available in the county," Li
Zhongbin, head of Nongan county said.
The power plant will greatly boost development of the
local economy, and increase farmers' annual income by 60 million
yuan (US$7.8 million), he added.
More than 8,000 tons of ash fertilizer annually will
also be provided to farmers for free after the plant begins
operations.
Statistics show China produces 350 million tons of
vegetable stalks every year, 24 percent of which is used as
livestock feed, 15 percent as fertilizers, 40 percent as fuel, and
18.7 percent is discarded.
The country has an abundance of biological resources,
and together with its stalks production, it exceeds 720 million
tons, of which 604 million tons can be used as energy.
"Compared with coal, stalks have a low carbon and
sulfur content. To promote this type of power plant throughout the
country will not only improve the quality of the environment, but
also effectively solve the shortage of coal which many enterprises
face," Sun Li, director of the Energy Research Institute of
Shandong Academy of Sciences, said.
Shanxian County in east China's Shandong Province opened its first biological
power plant at the beginning of the year.
East China's Jiangsu Province and Heilongjiang Province in China's northeast are
also embarking on plans to build such plants.
Denmark was the first country in the world to build
plants using stalks to generate electricity, opening its first
plant in 1998. Today, the largest power plant using stalks is the
Elyan Power Plant in England, with a power generating capacity of
38 megawatts.
(China
Daily May 8, 2007)
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