As spring approaches, China Energy Engineering Group Co., Ltd (Energy China) is accelerating project construction and market expansion to drive reform and development.
China Gezhouba Group No. 1 Engineering Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of Energy China, recently completed the signing and delivery of the Wangzhougang No.10 Resettlement Project in Yichang, Hubei Province — the province’s first urban renewal project under the “demolish and rebuild” model. The original buildings, constructed in the 1970s, had become unsafe due to aging infrastructure. The project replaced unsafe houses with modern residential buildings, significantly improving local residents’ living conditions.
Wangzhougang No.10 Resettlement Project in Yichang, Hubei Province [Photo/sasac.gov.cn]
On February 14, two sections of the Liuzhi–Anlong Expressway in Guizhou Province, invested and constructed by China Gezhouba Group Co., Ltd., were completed four months ahead of schedule. The 150-kilometer expressway, crosses through the stunning Huajiang Grand Canyon, with bridges and tunnels accounting for 80 percent of the total route. A key engineering challenge, the Zhenfeng Bridge, rises 145 meters above the Wanlan River. Additionally, the project team built over 10 kilometers of access roads, now maintained to benefit local communities.
The Zhenfeng Bridge rises 145 meters above the Wanlan River. [Photo/sasac.gov.cn]
Meanwhile, at the Chongzuo 2×660MW Power Plant in Guangxi, built by China Energy Engineering Group Anhui No.2 Electric Power Construction Co., Ltd., more than 200 workers remained on-site throughout the Spring Festival to ensure the project stays on schedule. The plant’s first unit is expected to be fully operational by the end of February.
Energy China is also expanding its market presence, securing contracts for major projects such as the Sichuan-Chongqing Ultra High-Voltage Power Transmission Project, the Xingtai Longgang 300MW/1200MWh Shared Energy Storage Project in Hebei, and the Daqing 40MW Hydrogen Fuel Cell Power Generation Project. Additional contracts include the Changzhou 100MW/200MWh Independent Energy Storage Project in eastern China, the Phase II 2×1000MW Project (Contract 4) of Shaanxi Yanchang Petroleum Fuxian Power Plant in western China, the China-Nepal Cross-Border Power Grid Interconnection Project in Tibet, and the Jinshan-Wuchuan Power Transmission Project in Inner Mongolia.
Looking ahead, Energy China will continue expanding its footprint, supporting China’s energy security strategy, and driving the transition towards a greener, low-carbon energy future through major infrastructure projects.
(Executive editor: Wang Ruoting)