China orders factories to shut down as it faces fiercest heat wave in six decades

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Worker carrying a monocrystalline silicon stick at a factory in Ningjin County, north China's Hebei Province.

Hong Kong, (Asian independent) China’s Sichuan province has ordered all factories to shut down for six days to ease a power shortage in the region as a scorching heat wave sweeps across the country, media report said.

Sichuan is a key manufacturing location for the semiconductor and solar panel industries and the power rationing will hit factories belonging to some of the world’s biggest electronics companies, including Apple supplier Foxconn and Intel, CNN reported.

The province is also China’s lithium mining hub – a key component of electric car batteries – and the shutdown may push up the cost of the raw material, analysts said.

China is facing its fiercest heat wave in six decades, with temperatures crossing 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in dozens of cities. The extreme heat has caused a spike in demand for air conditioning in offices and homes, putting pressure on the power grid. The drought has also depleted river water levels, reducing the amount of electricity produced at hydropower plants.

Sichuan, one of China’s largest provinces with 84 million people, told 19 out of 21 cities in the region to suspend production at all factories from Monday to Saturday, according to an “urgent notice” issued on Sunday by the provincial government and the state grid, CNN reported.

The decision was made to ensure that enough power is available for residential use, the notice said.

The southwestern province – which is also a key hydropower hub in China – has been gripped by extreme heat and drought since July. Since August 7, the heat wave in the province has intensified to “the most extreme level in six decades,” and average rainfall has dropped by 51 per cent from same period in previous years, according to an article posted on the government’s website on Tuesday, CNN reported.