Traffic lights gone dark. Factories shut down. What caused China's power crisis? [View all]
Classroom lights were off at Baita Elementary School. The screen at the front gate usually displaying announcements had gone dark too. Children were playing sports outside instead of learning, and mothers weren't sure when the energy crisis gripping China would end.
Weve never had power cuts like this in Shenyang, said one mother, wearing a long flowery skirt and permed hair. She declined to give her name. Blackouts for an hour or two were annoying, if tolerable, but now entire neighborhoods in her city were losing electricity for daylong stretches.
The woman was most worried about her elderly parents living in an apartment building 33 floors high. When the electricity went out, so did the water. She imagined them huddled in the dark, the elevators broken, their phones dead. She said people shouldn't "have to live like this in modern times. At least the government should warn us before it happens.
China's nationwide power crunch has caused drastic electricity cuts. Factories across the country have shifted to reduced schedules or been asked to halt operations, slowing a supply chain already strained by shipping blockages due to coronavirus outbreaks. The crisis had been building through the summer but caught public attention last week when Chinas northeastern provinces made sudden electricity cuts to residential areas.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/traffic-lights-gone-dark-factories-shut-down-what-caused-chinas-power-crisis/ar-AAP4299