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China's State Grid begins on $4.86 bln long-distance transmission line

China's State Grid has damaged ground on a 2,370 km electrical (1,480 mile) transmission line worth 35.3 billion yuan ($ 4.86 billion), state media reported late on Monday.

The ultra-high voltage transmission line will send out more than 36 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) annually of electrical energy from Gansu province in the west to Zhejiang in the east, passing through four other provinces on the way, state-run CCTV reported.

This represents about 0.4% of China's anticipated 9.82 trillion kWh of electrical power demand this year, according to a forecast by China Electricity Council.

The financial investment becomes part of a method to send out power from China's large renewable energy-rich western region to its power hungry and largely developed eastern provinces.

State Grid, China's primary state-owned energy, prepares to invest more than 600 billion yuan on grid investments this year, a 71.1 billion yuan boost from in 2015, according to CCTV.

Professionals have actually formerly said that China needs to accelerate new transmission capacity in order to absorb a boom in renewable power plant building.

Almost two-thirds of the big wind and solar plants under building and construction worldwide remain in China, research study by U.S.-based think tank the Global Energy Monitor revealed previously this month.

(source: Reuters)