« prev next »

Prepaid Gas and Electricity in Beijing


Related Categories
  Australia
  Beijing
  Boston
  By Train
  Chengdu
  Chicago
  Daocheng
  Flights
  Guangzhou
  Hangzhou
  Hong Kong
  In China
  Japan
  Lijiang
  Luoyang
  Nanyang
  New York
  Qingdao
  San Francisco
  San Jose
  Sanya
  Seattle
  United States
  Washington D.C.
  Xiamen

In Beijing, almost everything related to household utility is prepaid. This is the biggest difference in life in Beijing and Shanghai.

I have taken it for granted that the following things should be billed after use:


In Beijing, things are very different.

Card....

For most of the households in Beijing, they have many different cards:
- Electricity card. You have to go to bank or self-serve machine to buy electricity credit, and then insert it into the electricity meter to get electricity.
- Gas card. The same thing. Buy it at bank first, and insert the card into the gas meter, so you get gas.
- Hot water card. You have to got to the property management company to prepay the hot water you need, insert it into your hot water meter, so you can get hot water.

If you do not insert the card, the meter just stops anything from passing it - no matter it is electricity, gas, hot water, or anything else.

Big Difference

Mvm has complained for this when he was in Beijing. There are all types of people - people like to plan and people hate plan in advance. Not everyone can plan exactly how much electricity, how much water, and how much gas the family will use in that month. I assume in Beijing, people may often run into the situation of no gas, no electricity or no water. Imagine at night, you don't have electricity, like what Eric experienced during the middle festival. You have to wait until the second day to take short leave from work to buy some electricity...

Nothing Right, or Wrong. It is Just Different

I just feel the pain in Beijing, but there is no right or wrong. It is just different from Shanghai, just like many foreigners felt the difference and suffer from the difference from their own country in China.

What do you feel about the prepaid model in Beijing?

P.S. This page was actually created on October 1, 2008

"Prepaid Gas and Electricity in Beijing" was posted by Jian Shuo Wang at September 28, 2008 10:50 PM under (Travel » Beijing) category. Copyright: You are free to redistribute this work, as long as you keep this disclaimer and this link: http://home.wangjianshuo.com/archives/20080928_prepaid_gas_and_electricity_in_beijing.htm

Entries Related to "Prepaid Gas and Electricity in Beijing": Beijing

  1. Wrapping up my Beijing Trip October 31, 2008
  2. In Beijing, In Meeting October 29, 2008
  3. Adidas in Sanlitun Beijing September 30, 2008
  4. Prepaid Gas and Electricity in Beijing September 28, 2008
  5. Yogurt in a Bottle September 11, 2008
  6. Nanluoguxiang Is Special September 9, 2008
  7. Beijing Airport Express Train in Depth August 1, 2008
  8. Beijing Apartment for Olympic July 26, 2008
  9. Bus from Beijing Airport to Tianjin March 30, 2008

Comments on "Prepaid Gas and Electricity in Beijing"

I'm not good at planning, hence, I will feel severe unconvenience if I'm in Beijing. Whereas, I'm fortunately in Shanghai, and I just encountered the big problem of finding someone to fix or change my light or just trying to do it myself instread of having no electricity to use.

Posted by: Michelle on October 2, 2008 12:44 AM

In 2004 the wife, I, daughter and son-in law visited wife's family. We stayed a day or two in a small hotel in Hengyuan. All the others went shopping and I went back to the hotel room but could not figure out how to get the electricity in the room to work. I saw a slot in the wall by the door and remembered the clerk had put the card in the slot when showing the room. THAT was what turned on the juice. The prepaid cards, while putting some pressure on the users have an upside in that they allow for budgeting. You can allocated only what you can for various utilities. With the cards you will also learn exactly what you use.

Posted by: Kevin on October 2, 2008 5:05 AM

Maybe one of the side effect of the prepaid thing is to help people to raise awareness of natural resources, and maybe someone will think of environment protection. You always need to worry that turning on the light meaning that you need to go out and buy the electricity quicker....

Posted by: Jian Shuo Wang (external link) on October 2, 2008 10:00 AM

isn't that troublesome? have to go to the bank and queue to reload the prepaid cards? I guess I will be miserable having to queue and reload the prepaid. Worst if you have language communication problem.

Posted by: DC on October 3, 2008 6:45 PM

Hello, thanks for this interesting post !

Helen,

www.zongdo.com

Asian Dating, Shanghai Dating, Hong Kong Dating and Classifieds

Posted by: Helen (external link) on October 8, 2008 4:55 PM

Hello, thanks for this interesting post !

Helen,

www.zongdo.com

Asian Dating, Shanghai Dating, Hong Kong Dating and Classifieds

Posted by: Helen (external link) on October 8, 2008 4:57 PM

I like prepay all the utiliy and never worry about queue to buy it at midnight.
1、safe. No one can claim he will check the meter and cheat you open the door.
2、convinient. you can buy it by self-help machinery, you don't need queue up and find some cents to pay for the water.
3、Not a matter of planning. you don't need plan how much water or electicity you gonna use, just buy enough, it doesn't hurt.
4、if you rent a house. the dashboard will show the number ,and you don't need the last renter didn't pay for the water and electricity.
and so on....you will love this way if you believe we should live in a digital society.

Posted by: liuzhiyu (external link) on October 13, 2008 6:04 PM
Post a comment on Prepaid Gas and Electricity in Beijing
Name:

Email Address: (will not show)

URL: (optional)

Comments:


It may take up to 30 seconds before the server returns a result. IP address recorded.
Remember my information?

<-- Please click POST only once

This article Prepaid Gas and Electricity in Beijing and the rest of this blog:
© 2001 - 2008 Jian Shuo Wang. All right reserved.