Energy providers given coal-purchasing support
09 Jan 2023
A thermal power station is under
construction in Xiangyang, Hubei province. ZHENG XINTAO/FOR CHINA DAILY
China's latest move
to ensure energy supplies will enable State-owned power plants to have
sufficient funds to purchase coal this year, and help put planned coal and
electricity projects into operation during the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25)
period, said analysts on Thursday.
The remarks emerged
after the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the
State Council announced that it has promoted State-owned capital operating
companies and power generation groups to issue 200 billion yuan ($29.1 billion)
in special bonds for capital injection to fortify energy supply.
These funds will be
allocated to power plants in a timely manner so as to meet their coal needs
this year, the country's top State assets regulator said in a statement on
Wednesday.
Centrally
administered State-owned enterprises have generated 5 trillion kilowatt-hours
of electricity since 2022, accounting for 63.1 percent of the country's total.
SASAC currently is
able to monitor the operations of 195 coal mines, 572 coal-powered plants, 727
hydropower plants and 96 gas-powered plants owned by central SOEs across China.
Under serious situations
such as global energy crises, market turmoil and soaring electricity prices in
Europe, central SOEs have been relying on financial and technological
innovations to ensure stable operations of China's supply and industrial
chains, as well as overall energy consumption demand, said Ding Rijia, a
professor specializing in energy at China University of Mining and Technology
in Beijing.
Since the end of
September 2021, State Grid Corp of China and China Southern Power Grid, two
central SOEs, have organized cross-regional and cross-provincial power support
more than 3,000 times and transmitted nearly 50 billion kWh of electricity to
places in need, said the SASAC statement.
Ensuring sufficient
coal, natural gas and oil supplies will be priorities for the government and
central SOEs this year as imports of energy-related resources face various
pressures, such as high commodity prices and global gas shortage, said Lin
Meng, a researcher of supply chain management at the Chinese Academy of
International Trade and Economic Cooperation in Beijing.
To resolve energy
shortages, central SOEs — including China Petrochemical Corp and China National
Offshore Oil Corp — have all accelerated the construction pace of offshore gas
fields and raised imported oil and gas volume, said SASAC.
Natural gas output
of central SOEs surged 7.1 percent on an annual basis to 189.99 billion cubic
meters in 2022, while their total stocks reached 17.72 billion cubic meters,
jumping 17.2 percent year-on-year.
Daqing Oilfield,
China's largest onshore oilfield, recently announced that its oil and gas
production at home and abroad exceeded 40 million metric tons of oil equivalent
in 2022, while it made new breakthroughs in resource exploration in Sichuan
province and the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.
The figure includes
30 million tons of crude oil and more than 5.5 billion cubic meters of natural
gas, according to Daqing Oilfield.