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Army supports battle to repair snow-damaged power line
WUHAN—Some 3,000 soldiers and
workers are braving freezing cold in snow-covered mountains in central
China to fix a power line linking China’s powerhouse of the Three Gorges
Dam to the Central China State Grid.
“We are determined to fix the 500-kilovolt line by the end of February.
Strenuous repair works are being carried out in deep mountains some
1,000 meters above the sea level, covered with 60 cm of snow,” said Tang
Wenquan, general manager of the Hubei Electric Power Co. Tang said that
the snow disaster, the worst in five decades, has damaged more than 20
km of power line and 27 pylons along the line since Jan. 23.
He said that over 600 People’s Liberation Army soldiers and 2,300 repair
workers have been working flat out to clear snow and ice on the
mountainous roads to fix the damaged lines. The line has been dubbed an
“electricity highway”, helping to ease power shortages in Hubei and
Jiangxi provinces since 2004. The bad weather this year has not only cut
off some electricity transmission, but also made it difficult for the
transportation of coal from mines to local power plants in those two
provinces. But no mass blackouts have been reported.
Power generated from the Three Gorges Dam, the country’s largest
hydro-power project, is used by 11 provinces and municipalities in
central, eastern and southern China. Wang Lizu, an official from the
State Grid said earlier that power output from the Three Gorges has a
daily output of 92.4 million kwh. Several of its customer provinces have
reported power disruptions from the dam, because of damage to
transmission lines.
The Central China State Grid has mobilized 100,000 workers to fix 39
major power transmission lines since late January to guarantee power
supply in central China. Foodstuff prices saw a mild decline during
Spring Festival, the Chinese Lunar New Year, the Ministry of Commerce
said here on Sunday. The average wholesale price of vegetables on
Saturday declined to 3.79 yuan per kilogram, down 1.3 percent from the
previous day and 2.6 percent from Feb. 6, the new year eve, according to
the statistics of the ministry. Meanwhile, pork price fell by 0.4
percent from the previous day and 1.0 percent from Feb. 7. In mid-Jan.,
the Chinese government vowed to restrict price rises on key household
commodities, including on grain, edible oils, meat, milk, eggs and
liquefied petroleum gas.—Xinhua |