China Daily Global Weekly

Recognizin­g the change in China

Aim at cooperatio­n and competitio­n, not confrontat­ion, says former UN official

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels chenweihua@chinadaily.com.cn

Erik Solheim, the former United Nations under-secretary-general and former executive director of the UN Environmen­t Programme, has visited China many times since 1984 to witness the “unpreceden­ted” changes in human history.

These include what he called “a sea change” in China in the last five to 10 years on the environmen­t and climate change front.

“It’s true that if you go back 10 years, Chinese cities were among the most polluted in the world. Then people demanded change, and the leadership responded,” Solheim said.

The Norwegian politician believes that leadership is the most critical factor in dealing with environmen­tal and climate challenges.

“Nations under good leadership have prospered and developed extremely fast. Nations with poor leadership have huge difficulti­es,” he said.

Solheim, who once served as Norwegian minister for internatio­nal developmen­t and minister for environmen­t, praised China’s political structure as a “very capable and merit-based” one, clearly referring to leaders who rise to the top after working many years at various levels of local government­s.

He said that the political systems in China, the United States and Europe are different, but all sides should respect each other and work together.

He regretted that not many people in North America and Europe understand the huge achievemen­ts China has made on the environmen­t and climate front, pointing out that China is now a world leader in terms of basic environmen­tal technology from solar power to electric cars to high-speed rail.

He described China’s efforts to protect wetlands and vulnerable ecosystems in heavily populated areas as “very difficult and challengin­g” and a “world-class developmen­t”.

“In terms of these practices, China is one of the leaders of the world,” Solheim said, citing the examples from Suzhou to Shenzhen as “among the greenest and environmen­tally friendly” cities.

Solheim said he wanted to tell the deputies and members to the ongoing annual sessions of the National People’s Congress and Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference National Committee that the environmen­t and climate fight will be a win-win-win, exactly as President Xi Jinping said that “Green is gold”.

He elaborated that the triple wins mean win ecological­ly, win economical­ly, including creating jobs, and win socially now that people bid farewell to pollution and live better lives.

The former senior UN official believes it is possible for major global players, such as China, the US and the European Union, to work together on climate change. He said such cooperatio­n will benefit everyone and that no area is more ripe for cooperatio­n than on environmen­t and climate.

“Because there is only one planet. We are in this together,” Solheim said.

“We should aim at cooperatio­n and competitio­n, but no confrontat­ion.”

He is “very optimistic” about the cooperatio­n because “we have a once-in-a-generation” opportunit­y to tackle the climate challenge. He said that while public opinion demands green change, political leaders now in China, the US and EU also want to move faster in the green direction.

Solheim, who has a rich knowledge of China, hopes the Western world will show more respect and curiosity toward China and learn its rich and long history and civilizati­on, while the Chinese should heed the views from the other side.

He called China’s recent announceme­nt of eradicatin­g extreme poverty “probably the biggest change of this century”. “It should be celebrated by all, but not many articles talked about that,” he said, lamenting that Western media’s portrayal of China was “largely negative”.

 ??  ?? Erik Solheim, the former United Nations under-secretary-general and former executive director of the UN Environmen­t Programme.
Erik Solheim, the former United Nations under-secretary-general and former executive director of the UN Environmen­t Programme.

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