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October 14, 2021

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Desolate desert fuels highways to deliver power

On the western fringes of Maowusu, a major desert in northern China, rows of power towers stand on an area of about 26.7 hectares.

Every day, nearly 100 million kWh of electricity is transmitted from the facilities to the eastern coastal city of Qingdao about 1,300 kilometers away.

The infrastructure is part of China’s massive power network often termed “power highways,” built to transmit electricity from its resources-rich west to the more developed, power-thirsty east.

The power highways use ultra-high-voltage transmission, the world’s most advanced power transmission technology. China is the first country to fully grasp the UHV technology and put it into commercial use.

As the country is striving to meet its carbon commitment to peak carbon emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060, the power highways have seen increasing transmissions of electricity generated by green energy.

In 2020, China’s 22 UHV power lines delivered 531.8 billion kWh of electricity, of which 244.1 billion kWh were generated from renewable energy sources, accounting for 46 percent of the total, according to a July report released by the National Energy Administration.

China’s northwestern region is not only rich in fossil fuels but boasts abundant clean energy resources such as solar and wind power. The large areas of desertification land also provide space for developing power generation facilities.

In recent years, the new energy industry has experienced explosive growth in the region.

Northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region is an important supplier of the west-to-east power transmission program. Over the past 10 years, the installed capacity of Ningxia’s new energy power generation has increased 29 times from 850,000 kW to 25.74 million kW, local statistics showed.

In the northwestern province of Qinghai, the amount of electricity produced using new energy resources has accounted for 61 percent of the total installed capacity, official data showed.

In December last year, the world’s first UHV power line dedicated to transmitting clean electricity was put into operation in the province, stretching over 1,500km from Qinghai all the way to central China’s Henan Province. So far, the line has delivered more than 16 billion kWh of clean electricity to other parts of China.

“The electricity transmitted through the line in one second is enough to meet an average household’s demand for two years,” said Li Binshan, head of the Qingnan converter station at the origin of the power line.

At full capacity, the line can deliver 40 billion kWh generated by clean and renewable energy annually to regions including central China.

That is equivalent to that produced by 18 million tons of raw coal, totalling 29.6 million tons of carbon dioxide.

The trend for green power transmission is set to continue as China keeps up its capacity of clean and renewable power.

Multiple UHV power line projects will be built in northwest and southwest China during the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025).

They are expected to transmit 56 million kW of power.




 

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