Home News Law & Policy Religion & Culture Opinion Economy Festivals Photos Arts Special Coverage
 
    Economy

CNPC charts big investment plan
Tibet starts building its biggest solar power plant
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-03-19 21:04

LHASA - China's Tibet Autonomous Region Friday started building a solar power plant with an aim to ease power supply shortages in an environmentally friendly way.

Tibet starts building its biggest solar power plant
China's Tibet Autonomous Region Friday started building a solar power plant with an aim to ease power supply shortages in an environmentally friendly way. [Xinhua] 

The 10-megawatt solar photovoltaic generation project in Yangbajing, about 90 km northwest to Lhasa, Tibet's capital, will be completed in 10 months, sole investor China Long Yuan Power Group said.

Related readings:
Tibet starts building its biggest solar power plant Government's comfortable housing project in Tibet
Tibet starts building its biggest solar power plant Enjoying new life in new Tibet
Tibet starts building its biggest solar power plant China slams US house speaker's statement on Tibet
Tibet starts building its biggest solar power plant Tibet to step up exploitation of mineral resources

Long Yuan Power is a main subsidiary of China Guodian Corp., one of China's five major power companies.

Zhang Xi, general manager of Long Yuan Tibet New Energy Co., said the plant would help ease power shortages in central Tibet as it was expected to generate 430 million kwh of electricity during its 25-year life span.

The clean energy project costing about 220 million yuan (32.2 million US dollars) will help save 150,500 tonnes of coal and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 400,000 tonnes and sulfur dioxide emissions by 1,850 tonnes during the plant's life span.

Long Yuan Power also began the construction of a 1-megawatt geothermal power plant in Yangbajing township on Friday. It will invest an estimated 13 million yuan and finish building it in five months.

The high-altitude region in southwest China has more than 1 gigawatt of potential geothermal power resources for power generation, ranking the first among all regions in China.

Tibet started building its first geothermal plant in Yangbajing in 1975. Today the plant has an installed power generation capacity of 24 megawatts, and generates 100 million kwh of electricity per year.

Increasing the number of solar and geothermal power plants in Tibet will help to conserve the region's fragile environment, as more local residents can have access to clean energy rather than having to rely on burning coal or firewood, Zhang said.

About 27 percent of Tibet's 2.9 million population still are without electricity, according to the local power grid company.

 

 
  Video
Traditional Miao ethnicity dancing
  Latest News
200 rescued from snowstorms in Xinjiang
Vice premier stresses livelihood in Xinjiang
Forest fire raging in Tibet
Xinjiang gripped by flood fear
Email service resumed in Xinjiang
  Special Coverage
  A detailed Travel Handbook to Tibet and know more interesting tour routes
  Charming Xinjiang
  Slideshow of Tibetan opera