VIDEO Why is China facing a massive power crisis? Is the world worried? | China Power Outage | Black Out

China Connection

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Why is China facing a massive power crisis? Is the world worried? | China Power Outage | Black Out

About ten minutes long.



View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKz_3IH9FHQ




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China is facing a massive power shortage due to an increase in coal prices and stricter emission norms. Residents of North-East China are left without electricity due to a power crunch. The government has ordered several companies to halt production in order to manage power shortages in the country. An increase in demand for power from industries has led to a hike in coal prices. But will the power shortage in China affect the export market?
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
You are all in a house of cards.

Owner tells of a grid outage which took out Southeastern Massachusetts for about a half a day. Caused by a group of teen-agers, 400 feet of 18 ga. copper wire, and a brass doorknob.

They threw the doorknob/wire over the 345KV highlines leaving a major northeast power plant in Swansea, MA, knocking the plant offline. And survived to talk about it (below.)

The plant was restored within a work-day, but the failure point was found - the Police knew the modus.

Meanwhile, Bus drivers "listen" while they drive their passengers to the High-School - and braggadocio happens. Attendance records provided additional proof of malfeasance on the part of the students.

They were "coached & counseled," were brought to the power plant to widen their experience and understanding of what it actually takes to run a power plant, and sent away with 50 hours public service duty each - cleaning trash off the powerline right of way.

Such an even COULD happen at any time. Probably happens more often than you even hear about.

Which is why Owner has his LED Coleman Lantern - for me.

shopping


As Owner says, "Losing power is one 'force of nature' - I don't need another one."

Dobbin
 
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Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Could you post it ?
Search at Youtube search bar Dr Martenson at Peak Prosperity and you come to MANY Martenson Vids. Look at the time-stamps for the latest. The "energy" one is... (RT 34:34)

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=03bCDEwLCTk

An "upset" in the US energy supply would cause similar shortages - EXACTLY what Congress needs to promote the "Green New Deal" as "the solution" to US Energy shortages.

Timing is EVERYTHING in the Glorious Revolution.

Dobbin
 

20Gauge

TB Fanatic
Chinese switch to flashlights, generators amid power cuts


People in northeastern China ate breakfast by the light of smartphones and shopkeepers turned on generators as much of the country enforced power cuts Wednesday to meet official conservation targets and ease shortages in some areas.

News reports blame high coal prices they say make power companies reluctant to meet booming demand, while economists say the real motive is political: Officials are under pressure to curtail energy use to meet official targets.

In Shenyang, the northeast's most populous city, restaurant owner Li Yufeng used a battery from an electric bicycle to run a pot for noodles after seeing a notice power would be switched off at 7:30 a.m. Li said he started work two hours early, at 6 a.m., to prepare chicken, sauces and other dishes.

AP21272121986479.jpg

A man walks out from a mini market using a gasoline powered generator to run electric during a blackout in Shenyang in northeastern China's Liaoning Province, Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Olivia Zhang)

"There are some impacts, but not a big impact," Li said as customers ate by smartphone lights.

Factories in China’s busiest manufacturing provinces have been ordered to suspend production for up to a week, prompting concern global supplies of smartphones and other goods might be disrupted. Now, urban neighborhoods are being blacked out, triggering pleas on social media for the government to solve the problem.

China’s power consumption is growing at almost double its usual rate, while the ruling Communist Party is trying to reduce energy intensity, or the amount used per unit of economic output.

The power cuts come as global leaders prepare to attend a U.N. environmental conference by video link on Oct. 12-13 in the southwestern city of Kunming. That increases pressure on President Xi Jinping’s government, as the meeting’s host, to show it is sticking to emissions and energy efficiency targets.

The cuts are "largely driven by energy consumption control measures, with power shortages affecting another few provinces," Lara Dong of IHS Markit said in an email.

"This is in line with China’s decarbonization ambitions," she said.

The Cabinet’s planning agency warned in August that 20 regions had exceeded energy use and pollution targets after manufacturing rebounded from the pandemic. The government has ambitious plans to make the economy cleaner and more energy-efficient, so failing to meet those targets can be a career-ending blunder.

The power cuts "could be more disruptive than previous shortages," Bank of America said in a report. Due to shortages in some areas, it said, "a relaxation of the government’s energy consumption goals may not immediately alleviate the power crunch."

AP21272121885499.jpg

A man uses his smartphone flashlight to light up his bowl of noodles as he eats his breakfast at a restaurant during a blackout in Shenyang in northeastern China's Liaoning Province, Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Olivia Zhang)
China is one of the world’s biggest emitters of climate-changing industrial gases and consumes more energy per unit of economic output than developed countries. Given its huge population, on a per capita basis it ranks much lower.

China also is preparing for the Winter Olympics in the capital, Beijing, and the nearby city of Shijiazhuang in February, a period when it will want clear blue skies.

Officials in Jiangsu province, a manufacturing hub northwest of Shanghai, told state media some cities there have used up 90% of this year's quota for power use. The officials of the provincial planning agency were cited as saying individual city governments had to decide how to meet their targets.

The government of Guangdong province, China's biggest manufacturing center, has cited both official energy use limits and low water levels in hydropower reservoirs that provide a big share of its electricity.

In Liaoning province, where Shenyang is the capital, the government said in a statement Sunday that power demand hit a record high in the first eight months of the year. It said Liaoning has suffered shortages since then due to a decline in wind power and other sources.

The government of neighboring Jilin province blamed a shortage of coal. It said in a statement Monday its governor would visit miners in nearby Inner Mongolia to line up additional supplies.

Some advance warnings of power cuts to residents in Shenyang and other cities cited a need to ration power but didn't say why.

Li, the noodle restaurant owner, showed a reporter a notice circulated on social media that said power would be out in his neighborhood from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Shopkeeper Yang Chang had a generator running on the sidewalk to keep freezers full of meat cold.

"As long as there is electricity we can sell things, unlike restaurants that need water," said Yang. Yang didn’t know or care what the reason for the power outage was but said, "it’s understandable."

"I was born in the ’90s. When I was little, electricity wasn’t stable," said Yang. "Although we are having difficulties, the government will find a solution."
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
Chinese switch to flashlights, generators amid power cuts


People in northeastern China ate breakfast by the light of smartphones and shopkeepers turned on generators as much of the country enforced power cuts Wednesday to meet official conservation targets and ease shortages in some areas.

News reports blame high coal prices they say make power companies reluctant to meet booming demand, while economists say the real motive is political: Officials are under pressure to curtail energy use to meet official targets.

In Shenyang, the northeast's most populous city, restaurant owner Li Yufeng used a battery from an electric bicycle to run a pot for noodles after seeing a notice power would be switched off at 7:30 a.m. Li said he started work two hours early, at 6 a.m., to prepare chicken, sauces and other dishes.

AP21272121986479.jpg

A man walks out from a mini market using a gasoline powered generator to run electric during a blackout in Shenyang in northeastern China's Liaoning Province, Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Olivia Zhang)

"There are some impacts, but not a big impact," Li said as customers ate by smartphone lights.

Factories in China’s busiest manufacturing provinces have been ordered to suspend production for up to a week, prompting concern global supplies of smartphones and other goods might be disrupted. Now, urban neighborhoods are being blacked out, triggering pleas on social media for the government to solve the problem.

China’s power consumption is growing at almost double its usual rate, while the ruling Communist Party is trying to reduce energy intensity, or the amount used per unit of economic output.

The power cuts come as global leaders prepare to attend a U.N. environmental conference by video link on Oct. 12-13 in the southwestern city of Kunming. That increases pressure on President Xi Jinping’s government, as the meeting’s host, to show it is sticking to emissions and energy efficiency targets.

The cuts are "largely driven by energy consumption control measures, with power shortages affecting another few provinces," Lara Dong of IHS Markit said in an email.

"This is in line with China’s decarbonization ambitions," she said.

The Cabinet’s planning agency warned in August that 20 regions had exceeded energy use and pollution targets after manufacturing rebounded from the pandemic. The government has ambitious plans to make the economy cleaner and more energy-efficient, so failing to meet those targets can be a career-ending blunder.

The power cuts "could be more disruptive than previous shortages," Bank of America said in a report. Due to shortages in some areas, it said, "a relaxation of the government’s energy consumption goals may not immediately alleviate the power crunch."

AP21272121885499.jpg

A man uses his smartphone flashlight to light up his bowl of noodles as he eats his breakfast at a restaurant during a blackout in Shenyang in northeastern China's Liaoning Province, Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Olivia Zhang)
China is one of the world’s biggest emitters of climate-changing industrial gases and consumes more energy per unit of economic output than developed countries. Given its huge population, on a per capita basis it ranks much lower.

China also is preparing for the Winter Olympics in the capital, Beijing, and the nearby city of Shijiazhuang in February, a period when it will want clear blue skies.

Officials in Jiangsu province, a manufacturing hub northwest of Shanghai, told state media some cities there have used up 90% of this year's quota for power use. The officials of the provincial planning agency were cited as saying individual city governments had to decide how to meet their targets.

The government of Guangdong province, China's biggest manufacturing center, has cited both official energy use limits and low water levels in hydropower reservoirs that provide a big share of its electricity.

In Liaoning province, where Shenyang is the capital, the government said in a statement Sunday that power demand hit a record high in the first eight months of the year. It said Liaoning has suffered shortages since then due to a decline in wind power and other sources.

The government of neighboring Jilin province blamed a shortage of coal. It said in a statement Monday its governor would visit miners in nearby Inner Mongolia to line up additional supplies.

Some advance warnings of power cuts to residents in Shenyang and other cities cited a need to ration power but didn't say why.

Li, the noodle restaurant owner, showed a reporter a notice circulated on social media that said power would be out in his neighborhood from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Shopkeeper Yang Chang had a generator running on the sidewalk to keep freezers full of meat cold.

"As long as there is electricity we can sell things, unlike restaurants that need water," said Yang. Yang didn’t know or care what the reason for the power outage was but said, "it’s understandable."

"I was born in the ’90s. When I was little, electricity wasn’t stable," said Yang. "Although we are having difficulties, the government will find a solution."

20Gauge, thank you for finding a print article.

Videos are worthless to many members.
 

Hi-D

Membership Revoked
You are all in a house of cards.

Owner tells of a grid outage which took out Southeastern Massachusetts for about a half a day. Caused by a group of teen-agers, 400 feet of 18 ga. copper wire, and a brass doorknob.

They threw the doorknob/wire over the 345KV highlines leaving a major northeast power plant in Swansea, MA, knocking the plant offline. And survived to talk about it (below.)

The plant was restored within a work-day, but the failure point was found - the Police knew the modus.

Meanwhile, Bus drivers "listen" while they drive their passengers to the High-School - and braggadocio happens. Attendance records provided additional proof of malfeasance on the part of the students.

They were "coached & counseled," were brought to the power plant to widen their experience and understanding of what it actually takes to run a power plant, and sent away with 50 hours public service duty each - cleaning trash off the powerline right of way.

Such an even COULD happen at any time. Probably happens more often than you even hear about.

Which is why Owner has his LED Coleman Lantern - for me.

shopping


As Owner says, "Losing power is one 'force of nature' - I don't need another one."

Dobbin

Wonder how long it will take to build back better.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
About a dozen or so years ago they removed the 2 big coal boilers from a power plant near where I grew up.
Even though the plant had rr tracks they were too narrow to load the boilers at the plant. They moved them over the road for probably 10 miles then shifted them to rail cars.
Absolutely massive undertaking. So the question was brought up why?
Some Chinese company bought them.
Never would have thought 50yo boilers would be worth all that effort.
 

Elza

Veteran Member
Remember the great blackout in the North East years back? Something like 20% of the country went black. It was caused by the failure of an Allen-Bradly N-100 series relay. Small enough to be held in the palm of your hand. It failed, signaled overcurrent, and took Niagara off line. At that point overcurrent did start happening in other plants and they went off line. It cascaded through several states before thay managed to isolate the grid.

It would be VERY easy to put our entire country in the dark. Scary easy in fact.
 

AlfaMan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Remember the great blackout in the North East years back? Something like 20% of the country went black. It was caused by the failure of an Allen-Bradly N-100 series relay. Small enough to be held in the palm of your hand. It failed, signaled overcurrent, and took Niagara off line. At that point overcurrent did start happening in other plants and they went off line. It cascaded through several states before thay managed to isolate the grid.

It would be VERY easy to put our entire country in the dark. Scary easy in fact.

It would be nice to put in some software hocus pocus into the Chinese national grid. Drop every electric plant in China for a week or so. See what would happen to their fragile economy then.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Panic And Chaos Sweep Across In China As Power Shortage Leaves Millions In The Dark
64,776 views
Sep 29, 2021

Epic Economist

342K subscribers


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Widespread panic is sweeping across China due to a sudden power crisis that is leaving millions of homes in the dark and forcing several industries to completely halt production as strict rationing mandates have started to be put in place. China's energy crisis is threatening to trigger an economic and financial meltdown like no other. The risk of generalized supply chain disruptions is making economists extremely alarmed with the prospects of yet another global economic slowdown. Even worse, the crisis is likely to incite social instability all across the nation as residents grow increasingly more frustrated with the rigid mandates and prolonged blackouts.


Over the past month, at least 16 out of 31 provincial jurisdictions have enacted out electricity-rationing measures, alarming the population and plunging the nation’s industrial sector into chaos. “The situation worsened over the past weekend,” Lu Ting, chief economist at Nomura, wrote in a recent note, highlighting that large-scale outages are not limited to factories. Residents in both northern and southern provinces have been facing extensive blackouts for weeks, but since the beginning of this week, the situation has escalated to a whole new level. Traffic lights are being turned off and causing unprecedented chaos on roads and cities. Local authorities are urging residents to only use natural light in their homes and limit the usage of all electronics. And many angry and confused residents are reporting their complaints on social media, exposing that major electricity cuts have come during peak hours without any warning.

The country is currently facing power issues on two fronts. The main reasons for electricity shortages in the south of China are different from what's causing them in the north. While the south is running low on hydropower, the north is struggling with a massive spike in coal and gas prices. According to the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese government, the power cuts are forcing companies to raise prices of goods for Chinese consumers and resulting in rampant inflation. "This will likely bring unnecessary disorder to the economy and society," it said.In Guangdong, the provincial energy administration warned that "all walks of society" must conserve energy to prevent further widespread outages. Broad cuts to factories have already been implemented, but now office workers are required to use the stairs, and shopping malls are closing hours earlier than usual. Chinese consumers, for their part, aren't happy with the steep rise in energy prices and dwindling energy supplies. Local reports describe that the population is getting angrier and angrier as local authorities force them to ration electricity usage.

Even though official data released by the government does not mention explicit numbers, it is estimated that thousands of blackouts caused a lot of trouble across several provinces last week. In the northeastern city of Liaoyang, "twenty-three people were hospitalized with carbon monoxide poisoning after ventilation in a metal-casting factory was cut after a power outage," according to the state media. Millions of homes have been left in the dark for 5 to 10 hours in northern China over the past weekend, and millions more are likely to face a similar fate in the coming days. The government is stressing that people should ration power at all costs to “avoid the collapse of the entire grid”. One water company said in a statement released on social media on Sunday that “irregular, unplanned and unannounced power cuts or limits will last until March 2022, and power and water outages will become the norm to meet the requirements of the national grid and the mandates set by local authorities".


The energy crisis will likely cut China’s growth rate by 0.1 to 0.15 percentage points in the third and fourth quarters, CICC economists revealed in a report. “The power-supply shock in the world’s second-biggest economy and the biggest manufacturer will ripple through and impact global markets,” Nomura's Li Ting added. Given that companies all across the board are being forced to shut down or reduce activity, this could result in a catastrophic supply chain crisis in the coming weeks and months. While the world is watching the unfolding of the Evergrande crisis, the effects of China's energy crisis on the manufacturing sector may be overlooked, but the end result could be the worsening of the shortage of everything - from textiles to electronics components. And that could cause a financial and economic meltdown that would push the world's economy to the edge of a cliff very rapidly. Global events are accelerating at record speed. And we all should pay very close attention to what happens next. In the meantime, try to get ready while you can, because when the flow of goods between Asia and the U.S. is finally cut, we will see the rapid collapse of our nation. https://www.epiceconomist.com


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kemosabe

Doooooooooom !
A prelude to "Dark Winter" ??? starting with China? I personally have the feeling that things are going to get bad... ......
NO!.... VERY extremely BAD!
There are a lot of things happening around the world and here..... and it has all been gaining momentum and at a rapid pace...
In the Bible, in Revelations it says that man's days were shortened... and the reason the Lord did this was because if HE didn't , people would not be able to handle the horrors occuring during this time period ..

I think we are definitely starting to experience time passing much , much quicker then EVER...

Imagine what will happen if WE have no power for even just a month..... What if it is much much longer (as in years) ?, or if ever?

Even IF we went through a month... All hell would break loose, nuclear power plants would go into meltdown if they werent able to be kept cooled... and society would come unglued....... think utter lawlessness... all the military lining the streets....

And what is messed up, is on top of that potential fear , look at what is happening with the earth.. All the earthquakes, fault lines shifting madly , and volcanos are erupting EVERYWHERE... and almost one after another we are hearing about a different one ... Then you have Yellowstone to worry about because you KNOW that right now the Earth is being affected by something...... Whether it is the poles finally shifting now ... OR what some are saying, theorizing that planet x is or some outerworldly object , huge asteroid , or something from the heavens is what is causing the Earth to just go apeshit .. which in turn if it is that, then it will cause the poles to shift anyways....

I myself, dont really know .. I am a Sagittarius.... whom are known to be watchers and observers.... Which I can tell you that is me to a TEE ... I am very good at seeing connections in things.... patterns , etc .. So I am just saying , stepping outside the box and bring able to really seee the things going on around us, like alot of observers , I am scared shitless at how close we really are to having to experience our worst nightmares.....


yea guys/gals ... Hope and pray God graces us with more time on this rock .... But if it's HIS plan, and not man's , then Pray HE takes us painlessly quick, like a thief in the night, before we knew what happened..
 

Elza

Veteran Member
What the hell? The gov't IS the "difficulty".
Same here. The masses (here, there, and elsewhere around the world) have been brain washed to believe that the gov is the all being all necessary and will take care of the ignorant masses. The wailing and gnashing of teeth will be epic when they finally realize the truth.
 
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