Three Gorges Project officials have denied there is
the possibility of power generation in the Three Gorges Area being
affected by prolonged drought in the upper reaches of the Yangtze
River.
"Looking back at historical records from the past 130
years, there have never been two successive years when a serious
drop in the amount of water flowing into the mainstream of the
Yangtze has occurred," Yuan said.
"The Yangtze was at its lowest level last year since
records began in 1877," said Yuan, "but I believe it is unlikely
there will be a significant drop in the inflow of water into the
Three Gorges Reservoir from the upper reaches this year.
"Therefore, power generation in the Three Gorges Area
will not be affected," he said.
Observers, however, expressed concern that Yuan fails
to take consideration of the issue of climate change.
The Ministry of Water Resources Wang Shucheng said
earlier this month that extreme and abnormal climatic phenomena
like drought and floods have occurred more frequently due to global
warming in recent years.
More than 2.62 million people in southwest China's Sichuan Province and Chongqing Municipality on the upstream of the
Three Gorges have been suffering from drinking water shortages
since late February.
Cao Guangjing, deputy
general manager of China Three Gorges Project Corp., said the Three
Gorges Reservoir had gained a storage capacity of 11 billion cubic
meters of water after the water level retained in the reservoir was
raised to 156 meters last October.
"With the reservoir's newly gained storage capacity,
we can regulate the use of water needed for power generation in an
efficient way and make sure that electricity is produced evenly,"
said Cao.
Cao's comments appear to contradict those of Yuan Jie
early in February when the Three Gorges Project Corporation told
Xinhua that the water level in the reservoir was being lowered to
feed the drought-ravaged river.
"The water level in the reservoir will fall by four
meters from the current 155 meters," he said.
Three or four additional power generation units will
help to boost electricity generation in the latter half of the
year, which will serve as a powerful guarantee of fulfilling this
year's power production goal, said Cao.
"I am sure that even if there was a drop of 10 percent
to 15 percent in the amount of water flowing into the mainstream of
the Yangtze this year compared with an average year, we can still
meet the power production target set for the Three Gorges Area,"
said the deputy general manager.
China Three Gorges Project Corp. signed a contract
with the State Grid Corp. of China (SGCC) last December to sell 370
billion kilowatt-hours (kwh) of electricity in the forthcoming five
years.
In accordance with the power generation plan, the
Three Gorges Project, where 14 generating units are in operation,
and the Gezhouba project with 21 generating units, will produce
78.6 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity this year, according to
Cao Guangjing, deputy general manager of China Three Gorges Project
Corp.
The Three Gorges Project alone had generated more than
150 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity by mid-March this year
since July 10, 2003, when the project began power generation, and
has chalked up 38 billion yuan (about US$4.75 billion) in
revenue.
(Xinhua News Agency March 22, 2007)
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