Tom Swarbrick 4pm - 6pm
China turns on world’s second-biggest hydropower dam
28 June 2021, 09:34
The Baihetan Dam on the Jinsha River is part of Chinese efforts to curb surging fossil fuel demand.
The first two generating units of the world’s second-biggest hydroelectric dam have been officially turned on in south-western China, the government announced.
The Baihetan Dam on the Jinsha River, a tributary of the Yangtze, is part of Chinese efforts to curb surging fossil fuel demand by building more hydropower capacity at a time when dams have fallen out of favour in other countries due to environmental complaints.
The announcement came ahead of the ruling Communist Party’s celebration this week of the official 100th anniversary of its 1921 founding.
The 954ft-tall dam is expected to have 16 generating units with a capacity of a million kilowatts each, making it second in size after the Three Gorges Dam, opened in 2003 on the Yangtze, with 22.5 million kilowatts of generating capacity.
Both were built by the state-owned Three Gorges Group, the world’s biggest investor in hydro, solar and wind generation.
Hydropower is losing support in other countries due to complaints that dams flood communities and farmland and disrupt the ecology of rivers, threatening fish and other species.
Despite criticism by environmentalists, Chinese leaders are building more dams in an effort to reduce reliance on coal and to curb surging demand for imported oil and gas.
China is a leader in developing ultra-high-voltage (UHV) transmission technology to move power from dams in the south west to Shanghai and other eastern cities.
Once fully operational, Baihetan Hydropower Station should eliminate the need to burn 20 million tons of coal annually, the official Xinhua News Agency said, citing Three Gorges Group.