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Use of Solar and Geothermal Energy Resources
The vast Tibetan Plateau is the closest place on earth to the
sun. Solar energy, one of the region's superior energy resources,
is widely used. Solar cooking stoves and bathrooms, for instance,
are fitted in thousands of households. A stove using a 2-square-meter
solar panel is equivalent to a 2-kw electrical stove in most places.
Many families have also installed solar water heaters for year-round
supply. As farmers and herdsmen are scattered across a broad expanse
of land, electricity is beyond their reach. Well-to-do farmers and
herdsmen were longing for an electric light to replace their buttered
oil lamps and candles, as well as wanting a radio and television.
The spread and application of solar energy cells have made their
dream become true.
To know the current living situation of the Tibetan people, one
has only to look at what they eat and wear, what they use to decorate
their rooms. their spacious and bright houses, and their smiling
faces. Because harsh natural conditions featuring thin air and low
temperature are not conducive to horticulture and growing garden
crops, fresh vegetables and fruit have to be brought in by road
and air from elsewhere. The development of heliogreenhouse technology
has considerably enriched dining tables year-round with fresh fruits,
vegetables, meats and eggs. People begin to pay more attention to
nutrition and healthy food. Reform and opening policy, as well as
successive waves of scientific and technological revolution, have
made the Tibetan people's lives better and prosperous.
Since 1979, the Solar Energy Research Institute of Tibet Autonomous
Region has been developing solar energy stoves, ovens, water heaters,
heat collectors, greenhouses and heating houses. All these facilities
have passed through the experimentation and demonstration phases
and have been widely used. By the end of 1995, a total of 60,000
stoves and 55,000-square-meter water heating facilities had been
in use, along with 700 kw of solar power facilities including over
4,500 sets of solar power supply equipment for satellite ground
station. In addition, the region had built a swimming pool and 140,000
square meters of housing with solar heating system, and 1.5 million
square meters of various types of heliogreenhouses. This has helped
save energy equivalent to 120,000 tons of standard coal annually.
The annual comprehensive economic returns from solar energy are
now valued at more than 96 million yuan. As a result, the region's
Sunlight Plan is being rapidly expanded.
After dark, lights are lit on every street and household. The
lights twinkling in the households of remote mountain villages seem
like stars, giving all of Tibet a warm, harmonious atmosphere. All
these come from indispensable eothermal and hydropower resources.
In July 1977, the Yangbajain Geothermal Power Station, the first
of its kind in the region, was erected on the beautiful grassland
of north Tibet and began generating power three months later. The
state has invested more than 200 million yuan to make it the largest
geothermal experimental base in the country. The station now has
an installed generating capacity of 25,000 kw, ranking the 10th
in the world. The development of the Yangbajain Geothermal Field
and construction of power station there are of great significance
not only to power supply in Lhasa but also to exploration of abundant
geothermal resources in Tibet and the country as a whole.
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