Financial Nigeria Magazine

Sustainabi­lity with Chinese characteri­stics

- Stephen S. Roach, a faculty member at Yale University and former Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, is the author of Unbalanced: The Codependen­cy of America and China (Yale University Press). Copyright: Project Syndicate

To its credit, China is focusing on sustainabl­e developmen­t at a point when its per capita output is barely more than one-third the level in the so-called advanced economies. A relatively poor country has made a conscious choice to shift its focus from the quantity of economic growth to its quality.

In the here and now of climate change, it is easy to lose sight of important signs of progress. China, the world’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, is a case in point. By changing its economic model, shifting its sources of fuel, developing new transporta­tion systems, and embracing eco-friendly urbanizati­on, China’s sustainabi­lity strategy is an example of global leadership that the rest of the world should consider very carefully. In the rush to demonize China over trade, the West has missed this point altogether.

In the past 12 years, China’s economic structure has shifted dramatical­ly from excessive reliance on smokestack manufactur­ing industries to low-carbon services. Back in 2006, the so-called secondary sector of GDP – largely manufactur­ing but also including constructi­on and utility production — accounted for 48% of Chinese GDP, while the tertiary, or services, sector accounted for just 42% of GDP. By 2018, the shares had been reversed – 41% of GDP for the secondary sector and 52% for services. For large economies, structural changes of this magnitude in such a short period are virtually unpreceden­ted.

This shift was no accident. In March 2007, former Premier Wen Jiabao famously warned of a Chinese economy that was becoming increasing­ly “unstable, unbalanced, uncoordina­ted, and unsustaina­ble.” This sparked a vigorous debate over sustainabi­lity risks that had a major impact on China’s most recent fiveyear plans and reforms. The leadership concluded that the Chinese economy could no longer afford to stay the energy- and pollution-intensive course set by Deng Xiaoping’s hyper-growth gambit in the early 1980s.

Consistent with this dramatic structural transforma­tion, China has been aggressive in shifting the mix of its fuel consumptio­n away from carbon-intensive coal to oil, natural gas, hydro, and renewables. Although coal still accounted for 58% of China’s total primary energy consumptio­n in 2018 – more than three times the 18% share in the rest of the world – that is down sharply from 74% in 2006, the year before Wen’s “Four Uns” first drew serious attention to sustainabi­lity.

Significan­tly, China is leading the world in embracing non-carbon renewables such as wind, solar, and geothermal biomass. In 2018, China’s renewables consumptio­n was 38% larger than that in the United States and triple that of Germany. While renewables still account for just 4% of China’s total primary energy consumptio­n, they have been growing by 25% annually over the past five years (including 29% growth in 2018). If China remains on this path, then renewables

could hit 20% of China’s total energy consumptio­n by 2025 – a major breakthrou­gh on the road to a cleaner, less carbon-intensive economy.

China’s rapidly changing transporta­tion model is a third key component of its sustainabi­lity strategy. China has the world’s largest high-speed rail network, the fastest-growing subway system, and is leading all efforts in the rush to embrace electric vehicles. According to World Bank estimates, China is expected to exceed 30,000 kilometres (18,641 miles) of installed high-speed rail by next year, up from more than 25,000 kilometres by 2017, and to add considerab­ly more in the years ahead. This energy-efficient mode of long-distance rail connectivi­ty stands in sharp contrast to the carbon-intensive US interstate highway system created for motor vehicles in the 1950s and 1960s.

Finally, the urban environmen­t – obviously critical to any sustainabi­lity challenge – is especially important in China where rapid urbanizati­on still has about three decades to go, with the urban share of its population likely to rise from nearly 60% at present to 80% by 2050. Yes, as in other countries, roads in China’s major cities are severely congested. But China is doing something about it, boasting seven of the world’s 12 longest subway networks. Moreover, China’s electric vehicles (EV) market dwarfs those elsewhere, with sales of over 500,000 EVs in 2017, versus slightly less than 200,000 in the US and Europe. And China’s EV lead is projected to widen considerab­ly over the next decade.

China also stands out for its focus on a new eco-city urban model, featuring lowenergy constructi­on materials, light mass transporta­tion, and well-planned “green space” urban pockets. The Xiong’an New Area, planned as a “subsidiary centre” south of Beijing, is particular­ly noteworthy in this regard, as is the existing Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-city and Hainan’s recently announced plan to shift to all clean-energy vehicles. According to one recent estimate, China currently has plans to construct over 250 eco-cities. As a relative latecomer to urbanizati­on, China has the opportunit­y to rely on new models of city planning and energy efficiency that were not available to the first movers in the industrial world.

Is all this enough to make a difference for China and the planet? The good news is that China’s share of global emissions has flattened out, albeit at a high level. China’s share of global carbon dioxide emissions doubled from 14% in 2001 to 28% 2011, but has not increased since. While China’s CO2 emissions did rise by 2.2% in 2018, that was less than in the US (2.6%), Russia (4.2%), and India (7.0%) while falling well short of outright declines of 1.6% and 2% in Europe and Japan, respective­ly.

Alas, the good news in China is probably not good enough for a planet that many judge to be already in crisis. It’s one thing to bend the curve and stabilize the emissions share. It’s a different matter altogether to achieve the 20% reduction in the level of emissions as originally stipulated in the 2015 Paris climate agreement. Nonetheles­s, by shifting away from carboninte­nsive manufactur­ing to low-energy services, and embracing EVs, high-speed rail, and eco-friendly urbanizati­on – and likely to stay the course on all these trends – China is setting a high bar for the rest of the world.

While the trade war is important, China is winning the far more important battle for sustainabi­lity. To its credit, China is focusing on this battle at a point when its per capita output is barely more than onethird the level in the so-called advanced economies. A relatively poor country has made a conscious choice to shift its focus from the quantity to the quality of growth. What about the rest of us?

 ??  ?? Stephen Roach
Stephen Roach
 ??  ?? Chinese eco-friendly bus
Chinese eco-friendly bus

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