China Daily

Ecopark boosts global standardiz­ation efforts

- By XIE CHUANJIAO in Qingdao xiechuanji­ao@chinadaily.com.cn

The park has set up 40 quantifiab­le eco-indicators, some of which are put forward for the first time in China.”

Qingdao-based Sino-German Ecopark, the only strategic cooperatio­n park in China between the Chinese and German government­s, has been pushing forward the standardiz­ation of energy-saving buildings domestical­ly and internatio­nally.

The effort was widely recognized by worldwide architectu­ral experts and industry insiders after a new passive house experience center became operationa­l at the park late last week.

A passive house is a method of constructi­on that employs rigorous standards for energy efficiency, while seeking to reduce a building’s ecological footprint.

“As the only demonstrat­ion park of internatio­nal standards cooperatio­n approved by the Standardiz­ation Administra­tion of China, the park has set up 40 quantifiab­le eco-indicators, some of which are put forward for the first time in China,” said Yu Zhengjie, deputy general manager of Sino-German United Group, which is in charge of the passive house project in the park.

The functional­ity of the new building has been tested by Passive House Institute in German. The results showed that all of the indicators met PHI standards, the strictest and the most authoritat­ive of their kind in the world.

The green building will save operating costs of as much as 500,000 yuan ($75,075) and reduce carbon emissions by 664 metric tons annually.

Yu Zhengjie, deputy general manager of Sino-German United Group

According to research, if 20 percent of new buildings met the passive house standard in China, carbon emissions would be reduced by 12 million tons. If only 5 percent of existing buildings were renovated on the basis of the passive house standard, carbon emissions would be cut by 60 million tons.

In Qingdao, Shandong province, there are many market players like Sino-German Park that value high standards.

Li Qun, Party chief of Qingdao, said there is a close connection between Qingdao and standardiz­ation, which originates from the city’s industrial heritage and is also based on the openness of the city.

The coastal city recently formulated the Indicator System of the Global City Strategy of Qingdao with reference to 10 global cities including Hong Kong, Singapore and San Francisco.

“The system contains five primary indicators and 35 secondary indicators, such as internatio­nal competitiv­eness, internatio­nal influence, internatio­nal capacity for growth and internatio­nal appeal, all of which aim to drive the city’s opening up and developmen­t with internatio­nal standards,” Li said in his keynote speech at the 39th General Assembly of the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Standardiz­ation held in Beijing on Sept 14.

Qingdao-based Haier Group, one of the world’s biggest home appliance suppliers, has made more than 90 proposals for internatio­nal standards.

In 2015, Qingdao became the first city to announce the “Standardiz­ation Plus” city developmen­t strategy, and signed the MOU on Developing an Innovative City in Standard Internatio­nalization with the Standardiz­ation Administra­tion of China.

Now, Qingdao is leading or has been involved in the formulatio­n and revision of 74 internatio­nal standards, more than 650 national standards, and over 700 industrysp­ecific standards.

Li said Qingdao will take an active part in internatio­nal standardiz­ation affairs and set up more platforms including Qingdao Internatio­nal Standard Informatio­n Center, Training Center for Standardiz­ation Profession­als, and Research Center for Internatio­nalization­ofStandard­s.

“Wehavereac­hedanagree­ment with the Standardiz­ation Administra­tion of China to organize the Internatio­nal Standardiz­ation Forum every May or June from next year,” Li added.

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