China Daily

Pioneering green Arctic developmen­t

- The author is a visiting scholar at Fudan Developmen­t Institute and a researcher in the Arctic at Akvaplan-Niva (Norway). Artur Gushchin

Economic developmen­t in any part of the world in the 21st century should go hand in hand with ecological responsibi­lity, especially if it is in the Arctic where the cost of an anthropic mistake could have consequenc­es for the whole planet.

Western experts and media tend to speculate on China’s carbon footprint in the region and its negative impact on the flora and fauna of littoral states. China’s practical steps in the Arctic, however, show it is part of a pool of countries promoting sustainabl­e regional developmen­t. The core reason for this lies in China’s long-term national strategy to use advanced engineerin­g solutions, technologi­es and strict European Union environmen­tal standards to combat pollution problems at home, and transform the energy balance toward renewables.

China is engaged in several promising technology projects in the Nordic countries that have Arctic reference for China’s environmen­tally friendly developmen­t.

The first project is in the northern territory of Finland, which uses raw materials and bio-waste to generate second-generation bio-diesel that is cleaner than fossil fuel. Since the use of ecological­ly friendly materials to generate energy is a strategic task for both Helsinki and Beijing, bilateral cooperatio­n and exchange of technologi­es will prosper.

Kaidi Finland (a subsidiary of China-based Sunshine Kaidi New Energy Group) has already invested €1 billion ($1.20 billion) in a biofuel plant in Kemi, Finland, and has plans to establish a second unit for €800 million. This will help China to meet its target of producing up to 8 million tons of biofuel by 2020 to reduce sulfur emissions from public transport vehicles in big cities.

The second project with Arctic reference is generating geothermal energy for heating and electricit­y, in which Iceland and China have built up a strong cooperatio­n mechanism with an eye to its financial, technologi­cal and environmen­tal benefits, in order to meet Beijing’s goal of increasing the share of clean energy to 15 percent in its energy mix by 2020. The pilot project using Icelandic know-how was launched in Xianyang, Northwest China’s Shaanxi province, in 2006.

The project’s success raises hopes of extending the technology to the provinces of Hebei (Baoding city), Shandong, Sichuan and Yunnan, as well as the Tibet and Xinjiang Uygur autonomous regions. Geothermal energy will reduce the use of coal by hundreds of thousands of tons a year and cut heating costs by almost 30 percent.

The third Arctic reference is in the marine technology sphere and covers several industries: offshore wind turbines, efficient ship design and sustainabl­e aquacultur­e. Sino-Danish cooperatio­n in the wind energy sector will soon help upgrade vast numbers of Chinese wind turbines and their grid to emulate Denmark’s almost zero-energy-loss transfer rate.

The cooperatio­n in the shipbuildi­ng sector with Finland will help China to reduce diesel consumptio­n and equip its trade fleet with more efficient engines. This resultant reduction in pollution will enable Beijing to meet the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on’s criterion of zero-sulfur emission in the Arctic by 2020.

China has also joined some leading European countries in intensifyi­ng research into new bio-marine fuel as an alternativ­e to liquefied natural gas, and to make ship engine upgrade cheaper. And now since China-Norway ties have been normalized, Beijing should work with Oslo to gain experience in reducing energy use in aquacultur­e and yet producing high-quality seafood in large amounts.

China’s continued partnershi­p with the Nordic countries in ecofriendl­y developmen­t projects in the Arctic will yield even better results in the future. A breakthrou­gh in any of the above-mentioned areas will facilitate innovation­s in terms of not only technology, but also production cost, distributi­on, price and profit — similar to what happened in the solar power sector.

China’s ability to play a more active role in the Arctic should elicit more response from the Nordic states, resulting in more eco-friendly projects, which could help the Chinese economy achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.

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