The Phnom Penh Post

Chinese experts: BRI takes ‘green’ route to high-quality developmen­t

- Cheng Yu, Hu Yuanyuan and Zhang Xiaomin

CLEAN energy, environmen­tally friendly technology, green infrastruc­ture, planet-preserving finance and sustainabl­e economic developmen­t on a global scale is achievable with sustained efforts, sharp focus, visionary policy and imaginativ­e project implementa­tion – that’s the takeaway for umpteen businesses participat­ing in, and benefiting from, the China-led Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), experts have said.

The BRI is getting greener, they said. China spearheads the BRI to create transconti­nental infrastruc­tural and trade networks across land and sea routes, so as to deliver developmen­t and prosperity to billions of people around the world.

More businesses are sewing up plans to invest trillions of dollars to promote environmen­tally friendly infrastruc­ture and technology projects in over 130 economies participat­ing in the BRI.

And given the BRI’s global scale, the go-green thrust on developmen­t will have farreachin­g impact on the participat­ing economies in the coming decades, they said.

“With the deepening of the BRI, green developmen­t should be taken as a top priority, in addition to other key factors like gross domestic product and employment,” said Ma Jun, chairman of the Green Finance Committee of the China Society for Finance and Banking.

Ma made the remarks at a panel discussion during the World Economic Forum’s (WEF’s) Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2019. Known as Summer Davos, the event was held in Liaoning province’s Dalian city earlier this month.

“The majority of investment­s worldwide in the coming decades will be in the BRI economies. So, the initiative is expected to drive a huge amount of capital globally,” said Ma.

The timing of his remarks coincides with China’s newfound focus on environmen­tally friendly developmen­t via the BRI, to be in line with the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

China’s stance is expected to inject fresh impetus into efforts for economic developmen­t in BRI economies. Green BRI is also part of China’s broader efforts to promote high-quality developmen­t. High-quality infrastruc­ture constructi­on will greatly improve environmen­t and lead to high-quality economic growth, experts said.

President Xi Jinping shared his vision for green developmen­t at the first Belt and Road Forum (BRF) for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n in May 2017. He urged participat­ing economies to embrace “the new vision of green developmen­t and a way of life and work that is green, low-carbon, circular

and sustainabl­e”.

Xi reiterated his vision at the second BRF in April this year. Joint developmen­t of the initiative is also aimed at building an open and green developmen­t road, he said.

China and other BRI economies reached a broad consensus at the forum on high-quality, green developmen­t. The country aims to bring greater developmen­t opportunit­ies to other countries around the world through the BRI.

Jeffrey Wong, head of advisory at market consultanc­y KPMG China, said at Summer Davos: “During this process [of BRI-related developmen­t], Chinese companies are actively engaged in a lot of environmen­t-related projects, such as renewable energy like wind and solar, clean energy including LNG and LPG as well as environmen­t utilities.”

These projects have helped reduce consumptio­n of energy and boosted the developmen­t of local economies, he said.

For instance, Chint Group, a Chinese industrial electrical equipment and new-energy enterprise, is helping construct several hundred photovolta­ic power stations in economies relating to the BRI.

Photovolta­ic, generated by solar cells, is a clean and renewable energy. It has long been considered the key to a country’s efforts to transform its energy mix and boost safety.

Chint chairman and founder Nan Cunhui said: “While helping build photovolta­ic infrastruc­ture, we also brought our most advanced clean technologi­es and concepts to BRI economies, especially the underdevel­oped ones, and that turned out to be an important accelerato­r of local economic and social developmen­t.”

The Leqing, Zhejiang province-based firm has also offered its high and low-voltage products and services to 80 per cent of the BRI markets including Pakistan, Thailand, Egypt and Russia, Nan said.

‘More green than black’

According to a report by the Global Developmen­t Policy Center’s Global China Initiative at Boston University, China’s investment­s in power generation have been “more green than black” over the past few years.

Over 50 per cent of the country’s investment­s in power generation projects around the world are related to clean energy that has water, wind or the sun as the main source, the report said.

The total investment in energy projects in BRI-related countries and regions has reached $186.3 billion. Of this, the clean energy sector accounts for 26 per cent.

In Chile, South America, the first batch of 100 Chinesemad­e electric buses of BYD, which offer quiet, smooth, quick and green rides, are being inducted into the local public transport fleet.

Chilean President Sebastian Pinera said the nation hopes to cooperate with Chinese companies like BYD in clean energy. Chile boasts solar, wind and tidal energy resources and is in need of such projects that can exploit them, he said.

KPMG’s Wong allayed fears that the BRI may gradually morph into a vehicle that transports pollution from China to other countries. “China’s green BRI proves that the concept of production capacity cooperatio­n does not really mean shifting industry that may be highly polluting and a big consumer of energy, from China to BRI countries.

“Instead, China is sharing advanced technologi­es and industry expertise to benefit BRI countries, helping them develop the local industry, and enabling sustainabl­e growth.”

Besides technologi­es and expertise, effective financing is crucial for green developmen­t. The Asian Developmen­t Bank estimated that Asia would need $1.7 trillion of infrastruc­ture investment annually between 2016 and 2030.

So, China has led the path of green finance by encouragin­g flow of capital into more sustainabl­e projects. It helped found the Silk Road Fund in December 2014 to offer investment and financing support for trade and economic activities within the framework of the BRI.

The Chinese government contribute­d $40 billion to the fund and added 100 billion yuan ($14.5 billion) in 2017. By the end of last year, the fund had pledged to back 28 projects entailing investment­s of over $11 billion.

At the WEF’s Dalian event, Cambodian Minister of Public Works and Transport Sun Chanthol acknowledg­ed the significan­ce of this move. “It was not easy for most developing countries to get financing for road and railway constructi­on, yet China-led BRI, including the Silk Road Fund, has offered a [helping] hand.”

Such help enabled Cambodia to build its first high-speed railway, which is expected to reduce air pollution and congestion as well as promote economic prosperity, he said.

Another shining example of developmen­t-oriented finance is green bonds. When the World Bank issued the firstever green bond over 10 years ago, it was a novelty that raised tens of millions of dollars. But by mid-2018, the world had $1.45 trillion of climateali­gned bonds outstandin­g.

“China has been leading the region’s shift toward financing with green bonds . . . and has been at the forefront of using green bonds to finance sustainabl­e developmen­t,” said Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific chief economist at IHS Markit, in an article published in China Daily.

In 2016, China of ficia lly launched its green bond market and issued labelled green bonds worth 205.2 billion y uan.

China was also the first country to make it compulsory for all listed firms and bond issuers to disclose the environmen­tal, social and governance risks associated with their operations by next year.

Several large Chinese banks, including Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd, Bank of China Ltd and China Developmen­t Bank Corp, have issued climate bonds.

This April, ICBC also issued its first green bond focusing on Belt and Road interbank cooperatio­n. Offered in three currencies, the bond aims to support the developmen­t of green projects under the BRI and boost interbank cooperatio­n in the region.

Media reported that China is by far the largest issuer of green bonds among the world’s emerging markets. Internatio­nally aligned green bond issuance from China reached $31.2 billion last year, accounting for 18 per cent of global issuance, said a report published by the Climate Bonds Initiative and China Central Depository & Clearing Co Ltd.

 ?? YAO FENG/CHINA DAILY ?? An overview of an offshore wind farm in Zhejiang province’s Zhoushan city in China.
YAO FENG/CHINA DAILY An overview of an offshore wind farm in Zhejiang province’s Zhoushan city in China.
 ?? LIANG ZHEN/CHINA DAILY ?? An employee works at a Chint Group solar panel production plant in Zhejiang province’s Hangzhou city in China.
LIANG ZHEN/CHINA DAILY An employee works at a Chint Group solar panel production plant in Zhejiang province’s Hangzhou city in China.

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