Parts of Shanghai faced blackouts yesterday as the Chinese economic hub’s power network struggles to meet soaring electricity demand boosted by scorching heat, state media said.
The city sizzled over the weekend when the mercury hit 38.8°C on Saturday, the hottest July 5 since records began, the Shanghai Daily said.
“The city’s electrical grid is fully loaded. All the backup power generation systems are in use,” the paper said, citing a local power official surnamed Wang.
The city might have to introduce blackouts, Wang told the newspaper.
The Shanghai Meteorological Bureau forecast temperatures of 35°C on at least three days this week, the report said.
There were also power shortages in provinces surrounding Shanghai and the heat had left them short of spare capacity to send to the financial hub, Xinhua news agency said.
Power shortages have loomed each summer in many parts of China, particularly in the wealthier south and east, where consumption peaks because of increased use of air-conditioning.
The State Electricity Regulatory Commission said in a statement last month that the country would face grave power supply challenges this summer.
The State Grid Corporation of China, the nation’s top power grid operator, is expected to face a shortfall of up to 10 million kilowatts this summer given high coal costs and the hot weather, the agency said.
BEYOND WASHINGTON: Although historically the US has been the partner of choice for military exercises, Jakarta has been trying to diversify its partners, an analyst said Indonesia’s first joint military drills with Russia this week signal that new Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto would seek a bigger role for Jakarta on the world stage as part of a significant foreign policy shift, analysts said. Indonesia has long maintained a neutral foreign policy and refuses to take sides in the Russia-Ukraine conflict or US-China rivalry, but Prabowo has called for stronger ties with Moscow despite Western pressure on Jakarta. “It is part of a broader agenda to elevate ties with whomever it may be, regardless of their geopolitical bloc, as long as there is a benefit for Indonesia,” said Pieter
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