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China’s coal plants consumed a city’s worth of extra water every day during summer drought, alarming climate analysts

  • Coal power plants consumed excess water equal to a city of 1.2 million people every day during the 2022 drought, TransitionZero found
  • Propping up the grid with coal during drought exacerbates the very water shortages that limit hydroelectric generation, organisation says

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The Baihetan hydropower plant is seen in operation on the border between Qiaojia county of Yunnan province and Ningnan county of Sichuan province in China on June 28, 2021. Photo: Reuters
Yujie Xuein Shenzhen

Coal power plants in China’s Sichuan province consumed a city’s worth of extra water every day while a summertime 2022 drought was limiting hydropower production, in a vicious cycle that climate analysts worry heightens the risk of water scarcity.

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Sichuan’s coal plants used up around 21 million cubic metres of water during June to September 2022 as they ran at full tilt while the hydropower-dependent province was suffering from a drought-induced power shortage, according to climate risk data provider TransitionZero.

The daily excess usage, compared to the summer of 2021, equals the daily water needs of 1.2 million people or 480,000 households, TransitionZero found.

“Coal saved China’s hydro-reliant provinces during this summer’s extreme drought,” the climate think tank said in an article published on Thursday. “But using thermal plants to prop up the grid during dry periods risks exacerbating the problem of water stress.”

The Zhou river in Dazhou, Sichuan province, pictured on August 24, 2022, dried up due to heatwave and drought conditions. Photo: SCMP / Tom Wang
The Zhou river in Dazhou, Sichuan province, pictured on August 24, 2022, dried up due to heatwave and drought conditions. Photo: SCMP / Tom Wang

TransitionZero used satellite data to analyse the operation of Sichuan’s coal power plants. It found that numerous plants were generating at full capacity for long periods during the 2022 drought, producing 25,000 gigawatt-hours (GWh) over the June through September period. That represents an increase of 93 per cent compared to the same period in 2020 and 64 per cent above 2021.

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