China's power grid has been spreading quickly in rural areas,
with an extra 161,000 rural households hooked up since March this
year, raising the proportion of rural families with access to
electricity to a historic 99.4 percent, said the country's top
power operator Sunday.
Wang Min, spokesperson for the State Grid Corporation of China
(SGCC), said that since 1998 when construction of the rural grid
began, a total of 380 billion yuan (about US$48.1 billion) has been
pumped into the power network extension, more than was invested
over the past 50 years.
The heavy investment means that 99.9 percent of townships and
99.8 percent of villages in China now have electricity, she
said.
However, some outlying areas, particularly in western China, are
still not connected to the grid, Wang said.
The SGCC launched a project in March, vowing to bring
electricity to every rural household during the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010) period.
Big funds are needed to extend the grid to those remote areas,
where sparse habitation and long distances make the investment very
unprofitable, the company admitted.
"However, as China's top power and grid operator, this is our
social responsibility. We have no choice but to meet the basic
power needs of rural residents," said Liu Zhenya, General Manager
of the State Grid.
(Xinhua News Agency October 9, 2006)
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