China seeks to quell power crunch fears, as coal prices soar, winter
nears
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[September 29, 2021] By
Gabriel Crossley and Shivani Singh
SHENYANG, China (Reuters) - China on
Wednesday demanded railway companies and local authorities raise their
game in shipping vital coal supplies to utilities, as regions key to the
world's no. 2 economy grapple with power cuts that have crippled
industrial output.
The order, handed down from China's powerful state planner, comes after
a collision of tight coal supplies, tougher emissions standards and
strong manufacturing demand has pushed the price of coal, the biggest
source of China's electricity
https://www.reuters.com/
world/china/what-is-behind-chinas-power-crunch-2021-09-27,
to eye-watering records - just as winter approaches.
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Thermal coal futures in China hit an all-time high of 1,376.8 yuan
($212.92) per tonne earlier on Wednesday - adding yet more pressure on
power utilities unable to recoup added fuel costs. Curbs have been
imposed
https://www.reuters.com/world/
china/china-energy-crunch-triggers-alarm-pleas-more-coal-2021-09-28 on
power use in large swathes of the country, especially three northeastern
provinces that are home to nearly 100 million people.
"If there's a power cut in the winter then the heat stops too," said
Fang Xuedong, 32, a delivery driver in Shenyang, the capital of Liaoning
province, about a 90-minute flight northeast of Beijing.
"I have a kid and an elderly person at home, if there's no heat then
that's a problem."
Growing alarm among residents at the power crunch, now in its second
week, comes as the state planner - the National Development and Reform
Commission (NDRC) - formally urged local economic planners, energy
administrations and railway companies to beef up coal transportation to
meet citizens' heating demand during the winter season.
"Each railway company should strengthen coal transportation to power
houses (utilities) with inventory of less than seven days and launch the
emergency supply mechanism in a timely manner," said the NDRC.
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China, the world's top coal consumer imported a total of 197.69 million
tonnes of coal in the first eight months of 2021, down 10% year-on-year.
But August coal imports rose by more than a third on tight domestic
supplies.
Officials this week have repeatedly sought to assure residents that
there will be power for household use and for heating as winter
approaches.
But power rationing has been implemented during peak hours in many parts
of northeastern China since last week, with news reports and social
media posts signalling outages of traffic lights and 3G communications
networks in the region.
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People walk past a China Energy coal-fired power plant in Shenyang,
Liaoning province, China September 29, 2021. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
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China is considering hiking industrial power prices to ease the supply crunch,
Bloomberg news reported on Wednesday, citing unidentified sources.
The NDRC said later on Wednesday the government would not stop electricity
prices from floating within a reasonable range and would let them reflect market
fundamentals and changes in cost.
'AMBUSHED' BY RESTRICTIONS
The curbs also continue to affect heavy industry, such as metal production, and
manufacturers.
An internal document from a large technology components maker in China reviewed
by Reuters said more than half its daily production in Kunshan, in the eastern
industrial province of Jiangsu, had been suspended since earlier this week.
Meanwhile in Foshan, in southern China's bustling province of Guangdong, the
company was only allowed to produce late at night and in the early morning from
mid to late-September, according to the document, which said manufacturers were
"ambushed" with the new restrictions.
Li Shuo, a senior policy adviser for Greenpeace East Asia, called on China to
reform its power sector to help it absorb price fluctuations and ensure
stability.
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"This power shortage will carry huge economic and political implications. But
let's set the record straight, the root cause is high coal price, NOT climate
policies," Li wrote in a Twitter post this week.
"If anything, the power shortage demonstrates the importance of moving away from
coal, that a fuel that has been code word for energy security is not secure at
all."
($1 = 6.4662 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Gabriel Crossley in Shenyang and Shivani Singh in Beijing;
Additional reporting by Min Zhang in Beijing, David Stanway in Shanghai, Yimou
Li in Tapei, Beijing newsroom and Tom Daly; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell, Ana
Nicolaci da Costa, Kirsten Donovan)
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