Wednesday, 30 January, 2008
|||||| | |
| | | | | |
 
Search:  Advanced
Metro
Business
World
National
Sport
Feature
Opinion
District
Supplement
-- Advertisement --
Home > National Online Edition

Guizhou declares blackout emergency
By Lydia Chen 2008-1-30 
Change font size:
-- Advertisement --

GUIZHOU Province last night declared a top-level emergency as most areas in the province are without electricity after the power network was severely damaged during the worst snowstorm in five decades.

A total of 3,895 electricity lines had been damaged by yesterday while 472 power plants across the province have been paralyzed since the blizzards rampaged central, eastern and southern China starting on January 13, the provincial government told a news conference at 9pm yesterday, Xinhua news agency reported today.

Unusually cold temperatures, snow and sleet blanketing much of these regions have kept thousands of trucks and trains – loaded with coal, food and passengers – from getting to their destinations in the most severe winter weather in 50 years.

Blocked roads and railways have also choked coal shipments, magnifying energy shortages that have caused power blackouts in 17 of the country's 31 provinces.

Power supply capacity in Guizhou plunged nearly 50 percent to 3.06 million kilowatts by Monday from 7.2 million kilowatts on January 17 after some key power plants suspended operation because of the storm and lack of coal deliveries, the report said.

Electricity in 13 counties and cities in Guizhou had resumed by noon yesterday while electricity in 19 places have been partially restored, the report said.

However, 12 counties and cities in the province are still in darkness.

Meteorologists forecast sleet and a low of minus five degrees Celsius today, said the report.

Chinese story link

Click the button to copy the title and the URL of this story.
Home > National
 Email Story |  Printable View |  Blog Story
Read More Stories
  • Guizhou declares blackout emergency 2008-1-30
  • Weather makes it a stay-put holiday 2008-1-30
  • Wen speaks to calm snow and travel crisis 2008-1-30
  • Car workers get an extra day off 2008-1-30
  • Snow forces travelers to rethink festival plans 2008-1-30
  • Migrants advised to stay put 2008-1-30
  • Officers working around the clock 2008-1-30
  • Flights grounded 2008-1-30
  • Hospitals kept busy as snow causes injuries 2008-1-30
  • 500,000 people still stranded in Guangzhou 2008-1-29

  • Read More Stories

    Search:    Advanced
    Metro | Business | World | National | Sport | Feature | Opinion

    About Shanghai Daily | About US V3.4 NEW | Advertising | Term of Use | RSS | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Shanghai World Expo

    Shanghai Daily Home | Copyright © 2001-2007 Shanghai Daily Publishing House

    Back to Top


    沪ICP备05050403号