China Daily (Hong Kong)

UK expert sees more concern for ecology

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@mail. chinadaily­uk.com

The new Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t shows Beijing’s determinat­ion to reconcile economic growth with environmen­tal protection, according to a British energy policy adviser.

President Xi Jinping’s speech on the subject at last year’s 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, coupled with the creation of the ministry in March, demonstrat­es a strong commitment to address the issue, said Neil Hirst, a senior policy fellow at the Grantham Institute for Climate Change and the Environmen­t at Imperial College London.

“It’s a tough call because China still needs rapid economic growth to fight against poverty and achieve the aim of a moderately prosperous society,” he added.

Hirst, who works with the Chinese government on its policies on internatio­nal energy cooperatio­n, said, “The fact that more than 1,000 officials are to be punished for failing to fulfill environmen­tal protection duties is a sign of determinat­ion, but it is also, perhaps, an indication of the extent of the challenge.”

At the recent launch of his book The Energy Conundrum: Climate Change, Global Prosperity, and the Tough Decisions We Have to Make, Hirst lauded China’s aim of reducing the energy intensity of its economy by 15 percent between 2015 and 2020, saying it is the most important target as it detaches economic growth from carbon emissions. He said success requires the rapid rebalancin­g of the economy from heavy industry toward services and domestic demand.

“It will require further improvemen­t in industrial efficiency and energy regulation, which are already high priorities for the government,” said Hirst, who added that it will also be important to continue to adopt low-carbon technologi­es, such as solar and wind energy.

Hirst said developing countries are responsibl­e for most greenhouse gas emissions and will produce all future growth in the emissions.

During the 2018 two sessions meetings in Beijing, Li Ganjie, minister of ecology and environmen­t, emphasized that green developmen­t is the way for countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative to

achieve a promising future.

Hirst said that means the emphasis should be on their improving energy efficiency and on low-carbon energy sources such as renewables, hydro and nuclear power.

“It would probably be unrealisti­c to rule out new coal generation altogether,” he said, but only the “absolute minimum” new coal plants should be built, and they should be “highly efficient”. In addition to concentrat­ing on low-carbon hardware, “the Belt and Road Initiative should also help to educate government­s, industry and people in the low-carbon policies, technologi­es and practices that China is now beginning to pursue at home”, Hirst said.

It’s a tough call ... China still needs rapid economic growth to fight against poverty.” Neil Hirst,

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