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Telecom links resume for 60% users hit by bad weather
BEIJING—Approximately 11.91
million telecom users, or 60 percent of the total who had suffered
suspension in communication links because of snow damage in China, had
the service restored by Wednesday, sources with the Ministry of Industry
Information (MII) said on Thursday.
Heavy snow and icy rain falling since Jan. 10 in China’s eastern,
central and southern regions have caused deaths, structural collapses,
blackouts, highway closures and crop destruction. The MII sources said
owing to the extreme weather, more than 16,000 mobile telecommunication
base stations for relay line had so far discontinued services, 46,000
electrical wire poles had collapsed and 9,678.2 kilometers of telecom
links had been devastated. All these affected 19.28 million telecom
users and caused direct economic loss of nearly 150 million yuan (20.8
million U.S. dollars).
Those areas suffering the worst breakdowns in telecom links included
Guizhou, Hunan and Jiangxi provinces. The sources added that to maintain
operation of telecom equipment, oil and eletricity were now badly
needed. In a related development, storage of coal used for electricity
generating has declined to 21.29 million tons, less than half of the
normal amount, according to the State Electricity Regulatory Commission.
China’s 17 provincial-level regions adopted power-rationing measures as
coal shortages cut power generation. Continuous freezing and snowy
weather across large areas of China sharply raised electricity demand,
but also hindered coal transportation, which exacerbated power
shortages. Power plants that produced seven percent of the country’s
thermal power were shut down because of a lack of coal, the latest
figures from the State Electricity Regulatory Commission showed. Media
report said north China’s coal-rich provinces are beefing up production
and shipping coal to the blizzard-plagued southern regions.—Xinhua |