NEWSGD.COM
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Site Map | Chinese
News | Biz | Pearl River Delta | Enjoy Life | Culture | Travelling | Pics | Cities & Towns | Gov Info | Specials
Home> Specials>China Battles Against Snow Havoc
China's snow havoc causes losses up to 53.9 bln yuan
Latest Updated at 2008-February-2 10:10:40

Special Report: China Battles Against Snow Havoc

Heavy snow that snarled China's central, southern and eastern regions over the past three weeks caused economic losses of about 53.8 billion yuan (7.5 billion US dollars), a senior official with the Ministry of Civil Affairs told reporters in Beijing on Friday (Feb.1).

The worst snow in five decades has so far killed 60 people and forced nearly 1.76 million people to relocate. Nineteen provincial regions and the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corp. have reported losses from the crisis, which toppled down 223,000 houses and damaged another 862,000, said Zou Ming, a ministry official.

Hunan, Hubei, Guizhou, Guangxi, Jiangxi and Anhui were the worst hit regions. The central government has allocated 331 million yuan to fund local disaster relief work, he said.

"The snow has taken a toll on the Chinese economy," said Zhu Hongren, deputy director of the Bureau of Economic Operations with the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC).

Most parts of China are very short of electricity amid severe coal shipment disruptions and physical damage to the grid caused by the prolonged snow, rain and cold weather.

As of January 28, the country had experienced a power gap peaking at nearly 40 million kilowatts as a coal shortage cut power generation at some plants, according to the State Electricity Regulatory Commission (SERC).

The State Council, or the cabinet, has established a command center to coordinate contingency measures for coal, oil and power supply, transportation and disaster relief in snow-hit areas, said NDRC's Zhu.

On Friday, the Ministry of Railways started a 10-day emergency coal shipping campaign, vowing to ensure a daily thermal coal delivery of more than 40,000 cars during the campaign, said Zhao Chunlei, a railway ministry official in charge of train scheduling.

"Coal stockpile are stable and increasing, with small margins. But the reserves at major power plants are still below the level of last October," said Zhu Hongren.

The deputy director said that some areas could experience "continued shortages" because of transport disruptions and he added that the top priority was to "ensure the stability of prices".

Passenger transport has also been seriously disrupted as an estimated 2.2 billion intercity movements are planned by Chinese heading home for the Spring Festival. Some travelers use a combination of methods to make each leg of their journey, accounting for the large figure.

From January 25 to 31, a total of 5.8 million passengers were stranded throughout the railway system and more than 8,000 cargo trains were affected, said Zhao Chunlei of the railways ministry.

Civil aviation authorities said on Thursday that more than 3,250 flights had been cancelled during the six days through noon on Wednesday.

Bad weather also forced 380 planes to be diverted and delayed 5,550 flights, the General Administration of Civil Aviation of China (CAAC) said. However, airlines still carried 3.17 million passengers from the nation's 52 major airports between January 23 and 29, up 11.8 percent from a year earlier, by flying larger planes.

Editor: Yan

By: Source: China View website
  Related News
路Passengers to be home for holiday
路Leaders' visits boost morale amid China's winter-weather crisis
路Guangdong: 60% of migrant workers may stay put
路Guangzhou launches emergency power supply plan
路Traffic being slowly restored
路China fights "war" against havoc caused by snow

The 102nd Canton Fair unveils new logo

Man. United stars arrive in Guangzhou

[Group Photo]The Zhuxian Cave in Zhuhai

Hu attends opening ceremony of Shenzhen Bay Port

Pirates of the Caribbean 3 premieres in China
This site contains material from other media for content enrichment purpose only.
The Southcn.com website do not endorse such content and do not bear the joint responsibility of their copyright infringement.
The views expressed in written material posted to the bulletin boards of Southcn.com are those of the authors and/or publishers. The Southcn.com website does not endorse information products posted by organizations and individuals here. The originators of these information products are solely responsible for their content.
For copyright infringement issues, you shall contact Southcn.com within thirty (30) days. Email: falv@southcn.com
If you find any error in this page, please drag your mouse to mark the text with error, then press "CTRL" and "ENTER", to inform us. Thanks for your help!
Home  |  About Us  |   Contact Us  |  Site Map  |  Chinese
©2005 WWW.NEWSGD.COM. All rights reserved.registered number 020074 Terms of Use | Advertise | ICP Certificate No.B2-20050252
Guangdong Gov Link
Guangdong Gov Brief
State Structure
Guangdong in Brief
Laws & Regulations
Exchange Rate
Guangdong Guide
   
Museum Museum
University University
Eat Eat
Shopping Duting
Night Life Night Life
Weather Weather
Phone No. Phone Num
Consulate Consulate
Airport Airport
Travel Tips Tours Tips