Analysis
Baihetan Hydropower Station
Baihetan Hydropower Station in Southwest China, the world's largest hydropower project under construction, achieved a significant milestone today (Jun 28) with two of the 16 one-gigawatt turbines starting full power generation, Global Times reported.
The Baihetan Hydropower Station is located downstream of the Jinsha River, an upper stretch of the Yangtze River, on the border of Southwest China's Sichuan and Yunnan provinces.
When fully completed, it will house 16 China-developed generators, providing a total capacity of 16 gigawatts. Only two generators turned operational today while rest 14 generators of the hydropower station are forecast to be put into use by 2022 July.
Baihetan Hydropower Station will be the second most powerful in the world in terms of installed capacity after the Three Gorges Power Station in Central China's Hubei Province.
The US$34 billion project is being built by the China Three Gorges Corporation.
According to Chinese authorities, the Baihetan Dam is the world's first "seamless dam." Construction of the 289-meter-high dam involved more than 8 million cubic meters of concrete. The material was specially designed by experts to prevent possible thermal cracks which can occur due to changes in temperature.
President Xi Jinping sent his congratulations on Monday, soon after the generators were in full operation. “Baihetan hydropower station … is the world’s biggest and technically more difficult hydropower project that is now under construction,” he said, according to CCTV.
“It represents a major breakthrough in China’s high-end equipment manufacturing with its one-gigawatt generating units, which are the world’s first.”