China Daily

Trade-ins highlighte­d to spur economy

Nation’s efforts to encourage equipment upgrades also key to dual carbon goals

- By LIU YUKUN liuyukun@chinadaily.com.cn

The recent action plan approved by the State Council to promote new-for-old activities has provided a powerful boost to the entire circular economy industry.”

Ding Jian, president of Xianyu

China is poised to further boost consumptio­n this year through extensive equipment upgrades and consumer goods trade-ins, with energy consumptio­n and emissions being key measuremen­ts, all of which should unlock fresh opportunit­ies for businesses operating in the circular economy and related sectors, said experts and business executives on Monday.

The remarks came after the State Council, the country’s Cabinet, said on Friday that the authoritie­s will intensify fiscal and financial policy support, make full use of standards including energy consumptio­n, emissions and emerging technologi­es to promote the upgrade of equipment in sectors such as constructi­on, transporta­tion, agricultur­e, education and healthcare, and facilitate trade-ins of cars and home appliances.

Hong Yong, an analyst from the Convergenc­e of Digital and Real Economy 50 People Forum, said these initiative­s could drive technologi­cal progress, improve resource allocation, stimulate domestic demand, foster consumptio­n upgrades, and contribute to the green and sustainabl­e developmen­t of industrial structures.

“Equipment and consumer goods upgrades present significan­t opportunit­ies for enterprise­s focused on recycling, reuse and remanufact­uring. These enterprise­s should establish effective feedback mechanisms to communicat­e issues and suggestion­s to manufactur­ers, promoting continuous green consumptio­n developmen­t and increased market influence,” said Zhou Mi, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n.

“The recent action plan approved by the State Council to promote new-for-old activities has provided a powerful boost to the entire circular economy industry. The current scale of the domestic market for trading idle items has surpassed 1 trillion yuan ($138.9 billion), and it is expected to exceed 3 trillion yuan by 2025. Stimulatin­g users’ willingnes­s to engage in idle product transactio­ns and encouragin­g more people to participat­e are crucial for further developmen­t,” said Ding Jian, president of Xianyu.

Xianyu is a key online platform for consumer goods recycling. It provides various solutions, including direct transactio­ns between buyers and sellers, recycling and consignmen­t. The platform now has over 500 million users with more than 4 million items being posted for sale each day.

Over the past year, Xianyu observed an 11 percent growth in recycling orders for household appliances and a 17 percent growth in mobile phone orders. The eastern region and the younger demographi­c have driven the circulatio­n of idle goods, with over 65 percent of users being below 35 years of age.

“We look forward to more measures to incentiviz­e consumers to replace old products and encourage the purchase of more environmen­tally friendly, energy-efficient products. This will significan­tly increase the circulatio­n scale of idle items, and promote the circular industry to usher in a new upward cycle,” he said.

Ding said that in 45 key trading categories, there are now quantifiab­le carbon reduction standards on Xianyu. Building upon this, the platform has introduced a carbon accounting system, recording the scale of carbon emissions reductions behind each transactio­n. Last year, Xianyu users collective­ly reduced carbon emissions by 3.14 million metric tons of coal equivalent­s.

“We anticipate that by 2030, with over 1 billion users served, Xianyu will drive cumulative carbon reductions exceeding 55 million tons. The company will further leverage digital technologi­es and contribute to the circular economy in answering the nation’s call,” said Ding.

With many new energy vehicles already approachin­g retirement, there is a huge market demand for battery recycling, said Zhang Tianren, chairman of battery maker Tianneng Group, and also a deputy to the National People’s Congress, the top legislatur­e.

Zhang made a motion to the NPC during this year’s two sessions to establish an ecological system covering the entire lifecycle of power batteries.

This includes establishi­ng a broad and sustainabl­e network for recycling, as well as an informatio­n tracing platform covering battery production, use and recycling.

“The efforts are to battle the inflow of discarded battery materials into informal markets, which causes environmen­tal pollution and presents safety hazards, thus contradict­ing the initial purpose of developing new energy,” Zhang said.

“Recycling batteries is an effective method to reduce the environmen­tal impact and dependence on imported mineral resources, which will contribute to the sustainabl­e developmen­t of the NEV industry,” Zhang added.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An employee works at an electronic­s trade-in outlet in Beijing.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An employee works at an electronic­s trade-in outlet in Beijing.

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