China laid foundation for the experimental project of Ultra High
Voltage (UHV) grids in the north, launching the country's first
move to transmit power for a long distance through 1,000-kilovolt
alternating grids.
At the breaking ground ceremony held in Changzhi city of North
China's Shanxi Province on Saturday, Liu Zhenya, general manager of
the State Grid Corporation, operator of the project, said that
developing UHV grids is good for China to distribute its natural
resources in a more proper way.
The project, wandering for 653.8 kilometers and running across
China's Yellow River and the Hanjiang River, will transmit power
produced in Shanxi Province, China's largest coal base to Nanyang
city of Central China's Henan Province and then to Jingmen city of
Central China's Hubei Province.
With a planned investment of 5.7 billion yuan (US$713 million),
the grid is designed to have a rated voltage of 1,000-kv, a maximum
operational voltage of 1,100 kv and a transmission power of 5
million kw.
Over two-thirds of China's water resources are distributed in
West China's Sichuan and Yunnan provinces and the Tibet Autonomous
Region, and over two-thirds of the coal resources are found in
North China's Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces and the Inner Mongolian
Autonomous Region.
East and South China have the lowest reserves of energy and
other natural resources. But as they boast the most rapid economic
growth, they have the highest demand for energy.
Harboring alternating current at 1,000 kv or direct current at
800 kv, the UHV grids make the transmission of enough power over a
long distance possible.
However, having no successful cases so far in the world, there
have been heated discussions on whether to develop UHV
grids.
Japan and Russia have both built 1,000-kv alternating power
grids, but only for short-distance transmission.
The Chinese government finally gave admission to the
experimental project to encourage the exploration for a way to feed
the demand of energy-thirsty East and Central China by transmitting
power from energy-rich West and North China.
Liu Zhaoshao, Chief Economist of the State Grid, told Xinhua
earlier that if successful, the State Grid is also planning to
build more UHV grids transmitting power from big coal-fired power
or hydropower generators to electricity-thirsty regions from 2006
to 2010. They aim to construct a power grid which covers North and
East China by 2020.
(Xinhua News Agency August 21, 2006)
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