Construction of a mega wind power station is expected to kick off in Xuwen
County in the western part of Guangdong Province this year.
The 1.3 billion yuan project will include wind-driven generators with an
installed capacity of 120,000 kilowatts.
Some of the project's equipment and technologies, including the generators,
will be purchased from overseas, according to Huang Kaicheng, deputy general
manger of Guangdong Yueneng (Group) Co Ltd.
Huang's company signed a contract with local government for the construction
of the project on Wednesday.
Huang said many investors from Japan, Australia and Hong Kong are talking
with his company for equipment and technology sale.
The project is scheduled to be completed in three years and to annually
generate more than 240 million kilowatt hours.
Huang said he believes the project will be able to play a big role in the
economic construction of western Guangdong, where electricity supply falls short
of demand.
The Xuwen project is just one of the many wind power stations lined up in the
southern Chinese province.
In April, Guangzhou Development and Power Investment Co Ltd signed a contract
with the Huidong County government in eastern Guangdong's coastal area to build
another big wind power station there.
The Huidong plant will have an installed capacity of 800,000 kilowatts and
will be able to annually generate more than 1.8 billion kilowatt hours.
Other major projects in the offing include Zhuhai, Shantou, Yangxi, Yangdong
and Hailing wind power stations. All are located in the province's prosperous
coastal area.
The Guangdong provincial government plans to expand investment to develop
wind, solar and other clean power to bridge the province's electricity supply
gap that crossed 4 million kilowatt hours by April. It plans to achieve a wind
power installed capacity of more than 700,000 kilowatts by the end of
2010.