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City’s festive lighting criticized as Chinese shiver amid power cuts
BEIJING—Southwest China’s
Zigong city has been criticized for keeping a sea of lanterns, first put
up for the International Dinosaur Lantern Festival since Jan. 16, which
lit despite large-scale electricity shortages triggered by heavy
snowfalls.
The city, famed for its dinosaur fossils, has sought a new title - “the
southern city of lights”, and it wants to keep the lanterns lit for at
least 150 days. However, the city has faced serious electricity shortage
due to continuous heavy snow which has already hampered electricity
supplies and paralyzed transport in half of the country.
Netizens have suggested priority should be given to household
consumption, and that the lantern festival should be suspended. However,
the organizers said that the festival will not be affected by the
electricity shortage. The Sichuan province has undergone extreme cold
weather, rarely seen in the past two decades, with the average
temperature at zero degree centigrade, almost 5 degrees centigrade below
the usual temperature for this time of year.
The province has also experienced sporadic blackouts since the snowfall
disaster. Officials with the provincial power company said that if
action is not taken, the provincial power grids will face serious
blackout threat. As a result, Zigong city was told to cut its
electricity supply. The “Zigong Daily” reported Thursday that the city
is short of 2.3 million kwh electricity daily, 30 percent of its minimum
daily consumption. Some factories have been rationed for electricity for
nearly 15 days. The city government started its contingency plan for
possible blackouts on Jan. 14, stating that the government will
guarantee electricity for household use first. The city government has
yet to change its mind about the lantern festival, said an official with
the city government, speaking under conditions of anonymity.—Xinhua |