Monday, December 24, 2007

Chinese Online Class - Energy: Power firms asked to hire contractors to clean up plants

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BIZCHINA / Biz Media Digest

Energy: Power firms asked to hire contractors to clean up plants

(South China Morning Post)
Updated: 2007-07-23 15:17

Beijing has launched a pilot programme forcing coal-fired power
generators to contract out some of their desulphurisation equipment
installation and maintenance work, potentially creating a
multibillion-yuan industry.

The move, aimed at improving efficiency and compliance in use of the
pollution control equipment by power generators, is part of Beijing's
efforts to achieve the nation's sulphur dioxide reduction target.

In a joint circular issued this month, the National Development and
Reform Commission (NDRC) and the State Environmental Protection
Administration unveiled the three-year trial programme for power
generators to commission specialist firms to conduct desulphurisation
projects, China Power News reported.

The five national power producer groups will be the main participants,
with each being required to put at least two projects out for tender.

"The contracting out model will help raise project quality and equipment
utilisation rate, and speed up technological progress," the circular said.

The independent contractors will be responsible for the investment,
construction, operation, maintenance and daily management of the
desulphurisation. They will collect the 15 yuan per megawatt-hour tariff
increment sanctioned by the NDRC and enjoy other preferential policies
aimed at encouraging use of the equipment.

The NDRC has said that 137,000 megawatt s of existing plants would need
to be fitted with desulphurisation equipment between last year and 2010
to cut sulphur dioxide emissions at existing plants by 61.4 per cent.
Installation of the equipment is mandatory for new plants. Old plants can
be fitted at the discretion of generators but they must pay pollution
levies if they do not.

Desulphurisation equipment for each MW of capacity costs 200,000 yuan to
250,000 yuan, according to a research report by Citigroup head of
Asia-Pacific utilities research Pierre Lau.

This creates a potential market from existing plants of between 27.4
billion yuan and 34.2 billion yuan in the five-year period. With the
industry's capacity forecast by monopoly distributor State Grid Corp of
China to grow to 852,000MW by 2010 from 622,000MW at the end of last
year, the market is even bigger.

The number of desulphurisation equipment makers had mushroomed to more
than 30 from a dozen about three years ago, cutting equipment costs by
half in the process, Mr Lau said.

Generating firms are notorious for not turning on the equipment all the
time to save power but mandatory installation of electronic monitors this
year has improved compliance.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

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