Sri Lanka rations power after Chinese generator crashes during blackout by Staff Writers Colombo (AFP) Aug 18, 2020 Sri Lanka on Tuesday said electricity would be rationed across the island, after a Chinese-built coal power generator shut down during an hours-long nationwide blackout. Power will be cut for nearly three hours every day across the country of 21 million people to conserve electricity, the state-run Ceylon Electricity Board said. A "technical fault" at a 300-megawatt thermal power plant near the capital Colombo on Monday left the nation without power for up to 10 hours. The unspecified failure also caused the 900-megawatt Chinese-built Norachcholai coal power plant -- which generates almost one-third of Sri Lanka's electricity -- to trip. "A coal-powered plant takes a few days to restart after a shutdown," a spokesman for the board said. "We will have the power cuts to conserve electricity until we are able to reconnect the coal plant at Norachcholai." The spokesman did not say when the plant is expected to be operational. The disruption is the worst since March 2016, when the whole country was without electricity for more than eight hours following a massive system breakdown. The public utilities regulator said the electricity board had been given three days to probe the failure and explain the massive disruption. The power cut caused chaos on already congested roads in Colombo, with traffic lights not operating and police struggling to man key intersections. Water supply was also affected as there was no electricity to operate the pumps. Sri Lanka generates just under half of its electricity through thermal power, with just over 32 percent from coal. Hydro makes up almost 50 percent and wind about two percent.
Wind and solar power at record high in 2020, coal dips: analysis Paris (AFP) Aug 12, 2020 Wind and solar produced a record 10 percent of global electricity in the first half of 2020 as the world's coal plant fleet ran at less than half its capacity, analysis published Thursday showed. Despite a near-record drop in power demand due to the pandemic, renewables accounted for 1,129 terawatt-hours in January-June, compared with 992 in the first six months of 2019, according to a report by the Ember energy think tank. Overall, the percentage of power drawn from wind and solar has more than ... read more
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