China's least populated township connected to national grid

LHASA - A sparsely populated township in Tibet autonomous region has been connected to the state electricity grid, ending life without electricity for its 32 residents, local authorities said Tuesday.
The 15-km-long 10-kilovolt power line, which took five months to complete, is connected to remote Yulmed township in Luntse county, Shannan city, via 108 electric poles over a 5,000-meter-high mountain, according to the contractor, a Xining-based electric power company in neighboring Qinghai province.
Yulmed has an average elevation of 3,650 meters and its population was once reduced to one three-member household. Now it has nine households.
In 2008, the local government built a small hydropower station, but it failed to meet increasing power demands, due to improved living standards of the residents, and power outages were frequent.
- Last 15 hikers rescued from Qomolangma snowstorm
- The guardians
- Domestic tourism sees a boom during holiday period
- Xi to deliver keynote speech at opening ceremony of the Global Leaders' Meeting on Women
- Jilin farmers harvest golden rice in autumn fields
- China sees 16.34m cross-border trips during eight-day holiday