Shanghai Daily

Emission rules in place with an eye on carbon neutrality

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A SET of interim rules for carbon emissions trading management in China came into effect yesterday, marking a key step in the establishm­ent of a unified national emissions trading system amid the country’s all-out efforts to meet its 2060 carbon-neutral target.

A total of 2,225 power firms across the country, assigned with carbon dioxide emission caps, can trade their emission quotas via the system whereby firms that exceed their caps can purchase unused quotas from those with low emissions.

It is the first time China has specified the responsibi­lities of enterprise­s to cut greenhouse gas emissions, which will help boost green developmen­t and tackle climate change, according to Li Gao, head of the department for addressing climate change under the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t.

Li said that stable carbon trading among power firms will pave the way for the gradual expansion of the national ETS to include more industries, trading varieties and trading modes, thus promoting the system’s healthy and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

China has announced that it will strive to bring its carbon emissions to a peak before 2030 and become carbon neutral before 2060.

In an effort to build a national ETS, the country has been piloting emissions trading at the regional level since 2011, covering seven provinces and cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong.

The pilot programs have driven major emitters to significan­tly reduce their emissions over the years. At the China Emissions Exchange (Guangzhou), the country’s largest local carbon market based in the southern Guangdong Province, carbon emissions of listed enterprise­s in the power generation, cement, steel, and petrochemi­cal sectors dropped by 12.3 percent from 2013 to 2019.

About 250 major carbon emitters in Guangdong are listed on the exchange. They account for nearly 70 percent of energy-related carbon emissions in the province, a manufactur­ing powerhouse.

Data from the exchange shows that the carbon intensity, or carbon emissions per unit of GDP, of listed enterprise­s in the secondary industry shrank by 21.6 percent from 2013 to 2019.

Zhang Chen, deputy director of the exchange’s carbon market department, said emissions trading has helped Guangdong phase out its backward production capacity and achieve its emission reduction target.

Chai Qimin, who heads the strategic planning department of the National Center for Climate Change Strategy and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, said the constructi­on of a national emissions trading system can connect the various local markets in the country, enhancing market liquidity and reducing trading costs for enterprise­s.

In a bid to achieve its ambitious carbon-neutral target, China is striving to slash its carbon emissions by replacing fossil fuels with renewable energy.

The country has vowed to increase the share of non-fossil fuels in primary energy consumptio­n to around 25 percent by 2030, and bring its total installed capacity of wind and solar power to more than 1.2 billion kilowatts.

In north China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, a major coal-producing area, a total of 36 wind power plants with a combined installed capacity of nearly 7 million kW were connected to the power grid in early January in the region’s latest effort to curb its carbon emissions.

The total installed capacity of renewable energy in Inner Mongolia has reached 50 million kW, providing about one-fifth of total electricit­y consumptio­n in the region, according to data from the regional energy bureau.

Electricit­y generated here will also be transmitte­d to China’s more developed eastern region, contributi­ng to nationwide emission reduction efforts.

Inner Mongolia is the epitome of China’s nationwide drive to allow renewable energy to play a greater role in its energy structure. Official data shows that as of December last year, China’s total installed capacity of wind power had reached 229 million kW, while solar cells across the country have reached a combined installed capacity of 228 million kW.

In the consumptio­n end, Shanghai has pledged to lower the proportion of coal in its primary energy consumptio­n to around 30 percent by 2025, and add about 200,000 public charging piles for new energy vehicles, according to a government work report released at the annual session of the local people’s congress in January.

The megacity aims to bring its carbon emissions to a peak before 2025, five years ahead of the national target.

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