The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Carbon peak, neutrality goals attainable

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BEIJING: China is taking solid steps to peak carbon dioxide emissions and achieve carbon neutrality amid ongoing efforts to foster a new developmen­t paradigm and pursue high-quality developmen­t, the country’s top economic regulator says.

Liu Dechun, director of the Department of Resource Conservati­on and Environmen­tal Protection at the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said China has the ability to peak CO2 emissions by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060 as planned.

Citing official data, Liu said China has already made considerab­le progress in its green and low-carbon transforma­tion of energy during the past decade.

China’s clean energy consumptio­n accounted for 25.5% of total energy consumptio­n in 2021, an increase of 11 percentage points from 2012.

Meanwhile, the share of coal consumptio­n stood at 56% last year, a decrease of 12.5 percentage points over 2012.

Notably, China’s installed capacity for generating wind and photovolta­ic power increased by around 12-fold from 2012, and the nation’s new energy power generation output has exceeded one trillion kilowatt-hours for the first time.

China’s installed capacity of renewable energy has now surpassed 1.1 billion kilowatts, with installed capacity for hydropower, wind, solar and biomass power generation gaining top spots worldwide.

Between 2012 and 2021, China’s energy consumptio­n per unit of gross domestic product or GDP dropped 26.4%, and CO2 emissions and water consumptio­n per unit of GDP dipped 34.4% and 45%, respective­ly.

Looking ahead, Liu said the country will continue to implement measures mapped out by the “1+N “policy system for carbon peak and carbon neutrality, in which “1” is the guiding opinion and “N” is the detailed scheme of various industries.

More efforts will also be made to promote the green and low-carbon transforma­tion of energy, accelerate the push for industrial upgrading, boost innovation of green and low-carbon technologi­es, and improve policies to promote healthy developmen­t of the carbon trading market.

Citing official data, Wayne Huang, a Shanghai-based counsel at Linklaters, said the national exchange for carbon emissions trading has replaced the European Union Emissions Trading System as the world’s largest carbon trading system by coverage, with over 2,000 companies in the power sector.

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