Nuclear energy in Hong Kong
Currently, there is no nuclear power plant in Hong Kong. However, Hong Kong, through its Hong Kong Nuclear Investment Company Limited (HKNIC), owns 25% share in Daya Bay Nuclear Power Plant in Guangdong. About 70% of the power plant electricity output is supplied to Hong Kong by their electric utility company China Light and Power Co., Ltd. (CLP) to meet the electricity demand in Hong Kong.[1]
Electricity import from nuclear power plants in Mainland China
Hong Kong currently imports electricity from Mainland China from the Daya Bay Nuclear Power Plant in Guangdong since 1994. The agreement of electricity import lasts until 2034. CLP will also import 17% of electricity from the planned Yangjiang Nuclear Power Station in Guangdong by 2017 under the agreement with China Guangdong Nuclear Power Company.
Carbon emission mitigation
To reduce the carbon dioxide emission in Hong Kong, new coal-fired power plants have not been allowed to be built anymore since 1997. The government of Hong Kong have been trying to boost the share of renewable energy, natural gas and nuclear energy for power generation in Hong Kong. The current existing coal-fired power plants will be kept on low utilization as reserve.
The government itself plan to cut carbon emission up to 50-60% from the current emission by 2020 by gradually replacing coal-based power generation with more nuclear power and other green energy.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ "Background brief prepared by the Legislative Council Secretariat for the special meeting on 17 January 2011 | Daya Bay Nuclear Power Station Notification Mechanism" (PDF). 立法會Legislative Council. 11 January 2011. Retrieved 2014-08-23. line feed character in
|title=
at position 115 (help) - ↑ "Hong Kong to replace coal with nuclear". World-nuclear-news.org. 2010-09-15. Retrieved 2014-04-21.