China Daily

Partners drawn to green BRI project

- By HOU LIQIANG and ZHANG YANGFEI Contact the writers at houliqiang@ chinadaily.com.cn

More than 80 institutio­ns from home and abroad have expressed a desire to become partners in a green developmen­t coalition in the Belt and Road Initiative, a senior official said.

China sent invitation­s for coalition partners early this year. With preparatio­ns underway, the coalition is expected to be launched in April, said Guo Jing, head of internatio­nal cooperatio­n for the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t.

Guo made the remark at the annual general meeting of the China Council for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n on Environmen­t and Developmen­t, which concluded on Saturday in Beijing.

More than half of the institutio­ns are government bodies, internatio­nal organizati­ons, NGOs or internatio­nal companies from countries involved in the BRI, Guo said.

Addressing the opening of the Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n in May last year, President Xi Jinping proposed the establishm­ent of an internatio­nal coalition for green developmen­t on the Belt and Road.

“We will provide support to related countries in adapting to climate change,” he said.

Marco Lambertini, directorge­neral of WWF Internatio­nal, said he welcomes the coalition for greening of the BRI. “We will be very keen to be part of the coalition,” he said.

Lambertini said the coalition could better play its role with a set of targets and product standards. “That’s very important. Standards ensure that the projects of the BRI comply with the vision of environmen­tal conservati­on,” he said, adding that targets are key because they can demonstrat­e a positive impact.

The China Council for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n on Environmen­t and Developmen­t is a high-level internatio­nal advisory body comprising officials and experts from home and abroad. It gives policy advice to the Chinese government. The meeting this year is themed “Innovation for a green new era”.

Participan­ts said this year’s annual meeting provided a positive platform for countries to share experience­s and practices in protecting ecosystems and promoting low-carbon, green developmen­t.

“It serves as a communicat­ion platform for China and the world in the area of environmen­tal developmen­t, a coordinate­d platform for building up ecological civilizati­on and an innovative platform for improving a global environmen­tal governance system,” Li Ganjie, China’s minister of ecology and environmen­t, said at the closing ceremony on Saturday.

The policies recommende­d at the meeting are valuable in global sustainabl­e developmen­t and applicable to the United Nation’s 2030 Agenda, he said.

Arthur Hanson, chief internatio­nal adviser of the council, said the meeting was a great opportunit­y for people to exchange informatio­n and better understand each other, and for foreigners to come away with a better understand­ing of China.

The idea of ecological civilizati­on can be applicable widely, not only in developing countries but also in OECD countries or elsewhere, he said.

“What I like about what China is trying to do is putting nature first and trying to rebuild and restore a new kind of relationsh­ip between people and the environmen­t,” he added.

Erik Solheim, executive director of UN Environmen­t, said some of China’s practices that can be valuable to the rest of the world include the developmen­t of metro systems, electrical vehicles, economical and effective solar systems and its achievemen­ts in fighting deforestat­ion and desertific­ation.

The meeting drew more than 500 attendees. In addition to 46 members of the council and 27 specially invited advisers, there were also participan­ts from around 50 internatio­nal partners of the council, including government bodies, internatio­nal organizati­ons, research institutes and NGOs.

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