Farmers benefited from clean energy (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-11-15 11:25
It is lunch time. Zhang Guifang, a woman from Duyao, a far-flung village in
Qingyuan County, northwest China's Gansu Province, starts fire and cooks food on
a stove powered by methane gas.
A lavish lunch is ready in 40 minutes. "Cooking with a methane gas stove is
convenient and no longer a nuisance: it not only saves half the time with a
stove fired by straw or firewood, but is also less polluting," said Zhang.
Apart from cooking, Zhang also boils water on her methane gas stove, which is
connected to a methane gas pond dug beneath the family's pig sty via a white
plastic tube.
Zhang is just one of the many beneficiaries from a provincial new energy
promotion scheme for rural areas, with financial support from the provincial
government of Gansu, according to Pan Xiaoren, an official with the office for
promotion of new energiesin rural areas of Gansu Province.
Under the program, each rural household is provided with construction
materials worth 1,200 yuan (about 147.97 US dollars) for building methane gas
ponds.
Duan Chengyi, chief of the station for the promotion of agrotechniques with
Dalu Township, which exercises jurisdiction over Zhang's village, said methane
gas ponds were now very popular among rural households as they found using
methane gas as a source of energy caused no smoke.
Up to now, rural households in Gansu have built 123,000 methanegas ponds.
With the energy provided by methane gas ponds around legions ofrural houses,
farmers in Gansu burn less straws or firewood for cooking or keeping warmth,
saving 20,000 hectares of forested land from destruction or energy equivalent to
1.5 million tons of standard coal, said Pan.
In the meantime, methane gas ponds have offered organic fertilizers to 4,667
hectares of arable land in this landlocked province, said Pan, who added that
each rural household that uses methane gas as a source of energy could save
1,000 yuan (123.4 US dollars) a year.
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