Protective Relay Training - Basic
Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.
- Live Online
- 12 hours Instructor-led
- Group Training Available
Last winter, Beijing halted gas supplies to some industries and homes and asked hotels and office buildings to lower their heating dials after demand outstripped supply from Beijing's only source, PetroChina.
The city has 300,000 tonnes of coal in store for this winter, but heating systems in most modern office and apartment blocks are gas powered.
"Indoor temperatures will be above 16 degrees Celsius but no higher than 20 degrees this winter," the newspaper quoted an official of the Beijing Heating Group as saying.
Beijing has secured 2.91 billion cubic metres of natural gas for use over the four-month heating season which starts on Nov. 15, officials said.
"All the heating equipment will run at full rates. Should there be a long cold spell or a breakdown in the heating equipment, we will face a difficult situation of having no back-up sources," the official said.
PetroChina started up a second pipeline supplying natural gas to Beijing from Shaanxi province in July to help the capital stave off a winter fuel crunch.
The 900-km (560-mile) pipeline has an annual capacity of 12 billion cubic metres.
Nearly half the gas it carries will be channelled to Beijing and the rest fed into the massive west-to-east pipeline via a 920 km (572 mile) spur running to eastern Jiangsu province.
Beijing is forecast to nearly triple its use of natural gas to 8.5 billion cubic metres a year by 2014 as it battles to clear its often smoggy skies.
Related News
Wind power making gains as competitive source of electricity
Energize America: Invest in a smarter electricity infrastructure
India is now the world’s third-largest electricity producer
GM president: Electric cars won't go mainstream until we fix these problems
Pandemic causes drop in electricity demand across the province: Manitoba Hydro
On the road to 100 per cent renewables
Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter
Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.
Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE
- Timely insights from industry experts
- Practical solutions T&D engineers
- Free access to every issue