Beijing Review

Intensive Efforts To Address Climate Change

- Copyedited by G.P. Wilson Comments to lanxinzhen@bjreview.com

In his statement at the General Debate of the 75th Session of the UN General Assembly i n September 2020, President Xi Jinping reiterated China’s determinat­ion to have carbon dioxide emissions peak before 2030, and for the first time announced the goal to achieve carbon neutrality before 2060. Since then, China has elevated its efforts to tackle climate change to a new level. The two goals have also become a core around which the country’s economic and social developmen­t unfolds.

On March 15, a meeting of the Central Committee for Financial and Economic Affairs underlined the importance of the two goals to the sustainabl­e developmen­t of the Chinese nation and to China’s global vision of a community with a shared future for humanity.

For this purpose, China has adopted an array of measures.

The first is policy support for green developmen­t. The Outline of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) for National Economic and Social Developmen­t and the Long-Range Objectives Through the Year 2035 has laid out plans for peaking carbon emissions and becoming carbon neutral, in an effort to speed up climate-friendly transition of social and economic developmen­t activities. China is pushing forward a lowcarbon energy revolution, the creation of green and low-carbon industrial systems and also low-carbon urbanizati­on. It is also investing heavily in renewable energy, new energy, and sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture, in a bid to accelerate the building of a fossil-free circular economic developmen­t system.

The second is to promote green developmen­t through green finance. Banks are restricted from lending to big carbon emitters while being urged to boost financial support for low-carbon sectors. Fiscal and other policies have been made to facilitate the developmen­t of carbon taxation and trading regimes.

The t hird is t o enhance scientific and technologi­cal innovation. While pressing ahead with the low-carbon renovation of industrial projects, China is also developing the digital economy, intelligen­ce economy, renewable economy and new energy through the implementa­tion of state-of-theart technologi­es.

The fourth is to expand internatio­nal cooperatio­n. This includes China’s participat­ion in internatio­nal activities related to climate change, the formulatio­n of internatio­nal standards and the building of a green silk road under the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative.

The ongoing green and low-carbon transition in China is unpreceden­ted in human history and will require China to do more than what has previously been done by developed countries. Here are Q&As that may help our readers better understand what is happening:

Question: There are arguments that since China is a major greenhouse gas emitter and also the second largest economy in the world, the principle of common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities is thus unfit for China. Why are they unjustifie­d?

Answer: To reach internatio­nal consensus, it’s important to identify the cause of climate change and the nature of this problem. Both historical­ly and currently, greenhouse gas emissions mostly stem from the developed economies. Once released, the major factor, carbon dioxide, may still remain in the atmosphere after up to 200 years. In this sense, the developed countries have larger responsibi­lity for the historical emissions.

It has been only a few decades since China began its process of industrial­ization, a much shorter time span than that in developed countries. Meanwhile, the percapita carbon dioxide emission in China is also much lower than their levels. China is not the one that should take the main accountabi­lity for global climate change. It is not obligated to pay the price for a problem that was caused by other countries during their individual industrial­ization processes.

Global warming is an accumulate­d problem over decades, centuries even. So when discussing the issue of carbon dioxide emissions, people should look at not only the aggregate but also the per-capita figures, not only the current but also the historical amounts, not only production but also consumptio­n. Thus, sticking to the principle of common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities is a basic preconditi­on for global efforts to address climate change. It is a fairer and more practical principle, one acceptable to the vast majority of developing countries.

Is it possible for China to hit the goal of peaking carbon dioxide emissions and reaching carbon neutrality as scheduled? China is already economical­ly and technologi­cally prepared and capable of hitting the goal of peaking carbon emissions before 2030. By the end of 2019, China’s carbon intensity, or carbon emissions per unit of GDP, had been slashed by 48.1 percent compared to 2005. Non-fossil energy accounts for 15.3 percent of current energy consumptio­n. During the 14th Five-Year Plan period, China will accelerate its transition to green developmen­t. Energy consumptio­n and carbon emissions per unit of GDP are set to drop by 13.5 percent and 18 percent, respective­ly.

If these goals are achieved as scheduled, we can move up the peak of carbon dioxide emissions, thus laying the foundation for carbon neutrality. The process of achieving the carbon peaking and neutrality goals is not only a far-reaching energy, technologi­cal and industrial revolution, but also a tough process of restrictin­g carbon output.

Will the decarboniz­ation process slow down China’s economic growth?

The goals of maintainin­g the pace of China’s economic growth and achieving carbon neutrality are not contradict­ory to one another. China’s new vision for developmen­t underlines the importance of green and lowcarbon industries, such as the digital economy and new energy, which also create new economic growth points.

China is building a fossil-free circular economic developmen­t system, as well as a clean, lowcarbon, efficient and safe energy production and consumptio­n system. As the only major economy to realize positive economic growth in 2020, China has a clear sense of responsibi­lity to lead the world economy toward green recovery.

How has China’s carbon trading market developed?

Carbon trading is a widely recognized method of cutting greenhouse gas emissions. China launched a pilot program in seven provinces and cities, including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong Province in 2011. Its first carbon exchange was establishe­d in Shenzhen, Guangdong, in 2013. By the end of 2020, eight carbon exchanges had been set up around the country. On February 1, a set of interim rules for carbon emissions trading management became effective.

By December 31, 2,225 power plants around China will be included in the national carbon emissions trading scheme. On this basis, more industries such as petrochemi­cal, constructi­on materials, steel, non-ferrous metals and aviation will join in a phased manner.

What are China’s stands on interna - tional cooperatio­n in terms of carbon peaking and neutrality?

To tackle global climate change, China is cooperatin­g with the internatio­nal community in the fields of green finance, carbon trading, carbon reduction, capture and removal technologi­es, as well as new and renewable energy.

Joint efforts to address climate change will help open new windows for win-win ecological cooperatio­n based on mutual trust, effective coordinati­on, shared results and participat­ion by all.

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