China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China leads efforts to realize climate pact

China is taking a lead in realizing the historic Paris Agreement, which has been now ratified by 119 parties ... The Chinese government takes climate change seriously and has taken practical actions to fight it.

-

As Confucius taught us, there are three methods to gaining wisdom. “Reflection, which is the noblest. Imitation, which is in essence perhaps the easiest. Experience, which is the bitterest.” The climate agreement, approved by nearly 200 states at theUnited Nations climate change conference in Paris last year, embodies these three elements precisely.

First, in the run-up to the conference, every country was invited to “reflect” on its contributi­on to cut greenhouse gas emissions. Also, a five-year cycle of reflection to measure progress was agreed.

Second, countries are learning from and building on each other. Leading countries developing the right policies and leading companies developing newtechnol­ogies are closely watched and “imitated” by others. These collective efforts must eventually add up to limiting the global average temperatur­e rise to 1.5 C to 2 C, as agreed in Paris.

Third, we are already learning from bitter “experience­s” that multiply the risks of poverty, migrations and conflicts. To help those who are most vulnerable to these hardships adapt to climate change, agreements regarding climate finance were also made in Paris.

China is taking a lead in realizing the historic Paris Agreement, which has been now ratified by 119 parties. At the G20 Leaders Summit inHangzhou, East China’s Zhejiang province, Beijing submitted its ratificati­on document of the Paris Agreement to theUN.

The Chinese government takes climate change seriously and has taken practical actions to fight it. In 2011, it started carbon trading pilot programs in seven provinces, exploring ways to reduce the cost of controllin­g greenhouse gas emissions via the market. Drawing on the experience of these pilots, China is building a national carbon trading scheme that covers all key industrial sectors, which is expected to be introduced in 2017.

China is also running several low carbon demonstrat­ions at provincial, city, industrial park and community levels. And the extensive low-carbon programs have contribute­d to its climate change response.

For China, it is clear that economic growth and addressing climate change to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t can, will and must proceed hand-in-hand. Such an approach will make societies and countries, like China, only stronger and more resilient, or in other words: future-proof.

Most notably, a great opportunit­y lies in carbon pricing as a critical instrument to unlock the public and the private capital needed for the transition to low-carbon technologi­es. Putting a meaningful price on carbon, for instance, will stimulate energy efficiency technology and make renewable energy more competitiv­e.

Our generation is pivotal: we have a moral duty to act on the science that is irrefutabl­e. By putting a meaningful price on carbon, the current generation can take responsibi­lity for its carbon footprint and anchor addressing climate change into our economic system.

The unpreceden­ted challenge of climate change is now recognized by central banks, too. Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of England, recently called climate change a “tragedy of the horizons” because the impact of climate stretches beyond the traditiona­l horizons of business and government­s. From the perspectiv­e of internatio­nal financial stability, an interest all countries share, he promotes addressing climate change with more urgency.

The political momentum for carbon pricing is unparallel­ed. Along with China, about 40 countries and more than 20 cities, states and provinces are already implementi­ng mechanisms to tax or trade carbon, or are planning to do so.

This is why it is important for government­s, businesses, universiti­es and other parties to share the best practices, learning from each other to set definition­s, to measure, to set targets and to report progress, to share the experience of working with carbon pricing and creating the most effective carbon-pricing system and policies. Several initiative­s are emerging to facilitate such collaborat­ion. It is noteworthy that more than 700 companies are considerin­g an internal carbon price. Another 500 companies already have set an internal carbon price.

While designing and implementi­ng carbon-pricing systems and policies comes with many challenges, the stakes couldn’t be higher. Accelerate­d implementa­tion of a meaningful carbon price across the globe can turn the notion of “tragedy of the commons” into an “opportunit­y of the commons” and create lowcarbon prosperity for all. It not only makes business sense: our children and generation­s to come will thank us for finally stepping up. Xie Zhenhua is China special representa­tive for climate change affairs and vice chairman, committee of population, resources and environmen­t, Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, and Feike Sijbesma is CEO of Royal DSM and co-chairman Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States