Big projects like the Three Gorges Dam are all right, but small
ones are also efficient in generating hydropower and stepping up
economic development of rural areas.
Pint-sized and eco-friendly hydropower stations have sprung up over
the past decade, supplying power to more than 300 million people,
nearly one fourth of the nation's population.
To
farmers who previously did not even know what electricity was, the
small power stations represent a different type of energy
resources.
Visitors to Namka's home could find the middle-aged Tibetan man
lighting cigarettes with a 2-kilowatt electric stove rather than
the usual lighter or matches. "Each kw-hour electricity costs only
20 fen (US cents2.5). It produces no smoke, and is very
convenient," he said.
The Tibetan Autonomous Township of Qiaoqi, where Namka lives, in
Southwest China's Sichuan Province, replaces firewood with
hydropower several years ago.
Hundreds of Namka's fellow villagers have also benefited from
hydropower and not only use it to light cigarettes, but also to
turn on their TVs.
Over the past decade, the central government has strongly advocated
the establishment of small-scale hydropower stations in rural
areas, taking into account both economic development and
environmental protection.
Experts estimate that a family of four people like Namka's would
burn at least 20 kilograms of dry wood daily. Their annual
consumption is more than 7,300 kilograms, which is nine to 14 cubic
meters of timber.
"The environmental damage is even more serious. One household can
save about 0.3 hectares of wild forest a year by using electric
power," says Dong Wei, deputy head of Baoxing County in Sichuan
Province. About 40 percent of Baoxing people use electricity
instead of firewood; while the forest region has been set up as
nature reserve.
Chen Huizhou, a Beijing official in charge of China's electricity
development, said the building of a small hydropower station would
reduce forest logging by over 130,000 hectares per year, saving
about 9 million cubic meters of wood.
(Xinhua News Agency February 8, 2002)
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