China Daily

Facilitati­ng greener growth

Progress has been made on raising environmen­tal awareness of decision-makers but there are still challenges ahead

- The author is a senior research fellow of Institute of World Economics and Politics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

China’s 12th FiveYear Plan (2011-15) seeks to promote “inclusive growth,” which means ensuring the benefits of economic growth are distribute­d to a greater proportion of Chinese citizens. The plan’s key themes are rebalancin­g the economy, reducing social inequality and protecting the environmen­t.

The government has introduced a series of measures aimed at getting its pollution problem under control. A target has been set to reduce the number of carbon emissions per unit of GDP by 17 percent. The government also set a target for reducing emissions intensity in key industries by 30 percent by the end of 2017, and it is committed to producing 16 percent of its primary energy from renewable sources by 2020.

China has begun to draft a climate change law and may complete it in two years. If this law is passed, Chinese emissions standards will be applied across sectors such as power generation, iron and steel, constructi­on, and oil and gas sectors.

The authoritie­s have also several sustainabl­e urban developmen­t initiative­s. At the end of January 2013, the first batch of 90 pilot smart cities, including 37 prefecture-level cities, 50 districts (and counties) and three townships, were selected. Traffic management represents one of the key objectives in most of these projects.

China asked seven cities and provinces in 2012 to set regional caps and pilot programs for trading emissions. It set targets to cut carbon intensity and energy consumptio­n by 2015 for each city and province. The total amounts of carbon emissions can be estimated with planned economic growth. Quotas for carbon emissions will then be set and allocated to key enterprise­s. Shenzhen was the first to begin emissions trading, and Shanghai will probably follow this year.

China is working hard on green job creation. In a report from Greenwatch, China’s wind power industry, including both power generation and manufactur­ing, is expected to generate approximat­ely 34,000 green jobs annually between 2011 and 2020. The industry has provided an average of 40,000 direct green jobs each year between 2006 and 2010. China’s forestry sector employed as many as 1.8 million full-time workers in 2010 alone. Between 2011 and 2020, forestatio­n activities could offer as many as 1.1 million direct and indirect jobs annually. China’s solar PV industry is also projected to create an average of 6,680 direct jobs annually between 2011 and 2020.

Since 2009 the Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs and the Natural Resources Defense Council have carried out an annual evaluation of the state of pollution source informatio­n disclosure in 113 cities across China. On March 28 the two jointly published the 2012 Pollution Informatio­n Transparen­cy Index Evaluation Results Report, publishing 113 cities’ pollution source monitoring disclosure index score and ranking. The China Greentech Initiative, a collaborat­ive platform of Chinese and internatio­nal organizati­ons, which focuses on deploying integrated greentech solutions to help China achieve its sustainabi­lity objectives, has recently published The China Greentech Report 2013: China at a Crossroads.

All these show China is determined to pursue a path of sustainabl­e developmen­t. But there are still some risks that may hinder China’s green efforts.

The first challenge is green finance and technology. China’s scientific and technologi­cal capacities are weak. Low-carbon finance is overrelian­t on bank loans, and due to the high risk banks are not very willing to invest. Finance and technology are the two prominent challenges that require the government to provide incentives and financial guarantees and insurance.

The second challenge is the inefficien­t implementa­tion of low carbon

The government has made a good beginning and played a crucial role in raising the environmen­tal awareness of decision-makers at all levels and more effectivel­y integratin­g low carbon management into the decision-making process.

policies, which, in some cases, have led to unintended economic or environmen­tal costs. For example, roughly one-third of China’s installed wind capacity has difficulty connecting to the grid, causing millions of dollars of investment loss.

The third challenge is from the institutio­nal level. The dominant focus on GDP growth among local government­s challenges the central government’s ability to efficientl­y plan for green developmen­t. But the top leadership has signaled that local officials will need to do a better job of keeping pollution low in their jurisdicti­ons.

Fourth, unlike in the developed countries, which have long had wellestabl­ished tools and institutio­ns to monitor employment growth, China’s means of tracking job creation by industry have a long way to go. This capacity building is particular­ly important given China’s dominant role in the global green economy.

The government has made a good beginning and played a crucial role in raising the environmen­tal awareness of decision-makers at all levels and more effectivel­y integratin­g low carbon management into the decision-making process. These will not only bring economic benefits to the public, but also ensure the quality of their living environmen­t.

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