Bangkok Post

Beijing eyes 2060 carbon neutral goal

Xi renews climate targets in UN speech

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BEIJING: Chinese President Xi Jinping moved to seize the climate agenda from the US, vowing that the world’s largest polluter will go carbon neutral by 2060, a target hailed by environmen­tal activists as a major stride forward.

The goals, which included a pledge to reach peak emissions in 2030, are the most concrete yet announced by China, which accounts for one quarter of the planet’s greenhouse gas emissions blamed for fast-rising temperatur­es.

Speaking to the UN General Assembly, Mr Xi renewed his support for the

Paris climate accord and called for a green focus as the world recovers from the Covid-19 crisis.

Under President Donald Trump the United States — the world’s second largest polluter — has pulled out of the agreement, blaming China for the stalled momentum on tackling global emissions.

But in his speech, Mr Xi set China out as a climate leader, saying the Paris accord “outlines the minimum steps to be taken to protect the Earth, our shared homeland, and all countries must take decisive steps to honour this agreement”.

“We aim to have CO² emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060,” he said in a virtual address.

Mr Xi urged all nations to “seize the historic opportunit­ies presented by the new round of scientific and technologi­cal revolution and industrial transforma­tion”.

But China’s leader did not immediatel­y put meat on the bones of his carbon-slashing commitment.

China currently has 135 gigawatts of coal-power capacity either permitted or under constructi­on, according to Global Energy Monitor, a San Francisco-based environmen­tal group.

That equates to about half the total coal-power capacity in the US.

The European Union had been pushing China to be more ambitious by moving the peak emissions date to 2025, arguing that the five year gap is crucial as the planet falls behind in fighting climate change.

The Paris climate deal commits nations to limit global temperatur­e rises to “well below” two degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels through a rapid and sweeping drawdown of greenhouse gas emissions.

Joeri Rogelj, a climate expert at Imperial College London’s Grantham Institute, called Mr Xi’s pledge “unexpected and eye-opening”.

“All in all, China’s announceme­nt is a defining moment that resets the ambition of global climate action,” he said.

The 2060 objective is still less ambitious than the 2050 date set by dozens of small states as well as European powers.

Several experts said it was still a significan­t step to bring new life to the Paris accords.

“This announceme­nt will send positive shockwaves through diplomatic circles and should prompt greater climate ambition from other major emitters,” said Helen Mountford, vice president for climate and economics at the World Resources Institute in Washington.

But she cautioned that the “devil will be in the details” and said that China should set more specific goals in the nearer term.

Jean-Pascal van Ypersele, a Belgian climate scientist and former vice chair of the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, a UN expert panel, called Mr Xi’s commitment “very important”.

But he questioned whether China would follow its own guidelines as it pursues a global infrastruc­ture-building binge — for example, if it will still back coal plants in Africa.

“If this coherence is lacking, the progress made in China could be lost due to additional emissions by Chinese-built or -funded fossil infrastruc­ture in developing countries,” he said.

Mr Xi’s tone contrasted sharply with that of Mr Trump, who called the Paris accord negotiated by his predecesso­r Barack Obama unfair.

Mr Trump says he is standing up for US constituen­cies such as coal miners and has loosened environmen­tal rules, although individual US states such as California have insisted on fighting climate change on their own.

“Those who attack America’s exceptiona­l environmen­tal record while ignoring China’s rampant pollution are not interested in the environmen­t,” Mr Trump said in a UN speech shortly before Mr Xi spoke. “They only want to punish America, and I will not stand for it.”

China’s ambassador to the United Nations, Zhang Jun, said, “The United States should be the last one to talk about climate change.”

 ?? AFP ?? This photo taken on Aug 3 shows apartments with balconies covered with plants in Chengdu, Sichuan province.
AFP This photo taken on Aug 3 shows apartments with balconies covered with plants in Chengdu, Sichuan province.
 ??  ?? Xi: Sets China as climate leader
Xi: Sets China as climate leader

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