Over 3,000 farmers and herdsmen cheered as the country's largest
solar power station began operation in a pasture inhabited by
people of the Kazak nationality in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region, northwest China.
The 150 kw solar power station, which became operational Wednesday,
is located in the Beitashan Livestock Farm under the Xinjiang
Production and Construction Corps, which borders Mongolia in the
northeast and covers an area of more than 2,000 km.
The farm, set up in 1952, has over 600 households with population
exceeding 3,000, and 90 percent of the population belong to the
Kazak nationality.
Because of complicated topographical conditions, the remote
livestock farm has no electricity facilities in its history of 51
years, except a small diesel generator. Some 90 percent of the
pasture area receives no TV signal, and operations for patients
were often delayed due to shortage of power. The farm has been
listed among the country's most electricity-thirsty farms.
However, great changes have taken place since March 2002 when the
country launched a massive project to supply power to the remote
regions in the western provinces and autonomous regions.
And some 28 remote farms and pastures under the jurisdiction of the
Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, as well as 48 remote
villages in the region have benefited from the project, which cost
120 million yuan (14.5 million US dollars).
The Beitashan Livestock Farm is one of the beneficiaries. From June
to September this year, the Xinjiang New Energy Co. Ltd has helped
the Beitashan Livestock Farm set up a 150 kw solar power station,
the largest in the country, by taking advantage of its abundant
solar energy resources.
Experts here said it is the most economic way to transfer sunlight
into power in Beitashan which enjoys rich solar energy resources.
Otherwise, it will cost much more to get electricity from major
power grids or by using diesel generator. The nearest power grid is
about 200 km away, and it is very expensive and difficult to extend
the power grid. While massive utilization of diesel generators may
cause heavy pollution.
The solar power station has adopted multiple advanced technologies
including photoelectron, automatic control and an electricity
reserve system.
The Beitashan 150 kw solar power station is emerging as the
country's largest in terms of generating capacity, and the 100 kw
solar power station built in Angdo in the Tibet Autonomous Region
has taken the second place.
(People's Daily September 27, 2003)
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