China Daily

On way to realizing ecological civilizati­on

- The author is director of the Institute for Urban and Environmen­tal Studies, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. This is an excerpt from his speech in December.

Alot of achievemen­ts have been made on the ecological transforma­tion front over the past four decades. China faced the “Malthusian trap” when society was overwhelmi­ngly agricultur­al in nature. The “Malthusian trap” refers to a condition when excess population stops growing because of shortage of food supply.

During the industrial­ization period, China confronted “environmen­tal pollution, ecological bottom line and the upper limit of resources”. It has eventually stepped into the third stage of ecological civilizati­on in the new era that pursues harmony between human beings and nature.

Two factors made this transition possible. First, after farmers were freed from the land, ecological protection was strengthen­ed, and the pressure the ecological environmen­t had suffered was eased. And thanks to actions such as reconverti­ng farmland to forests and grasslands, the ecological environmen­t has been improved and almost restored to its natural state.

Second, setting the farmers free from the land facilitate­d the increase in productivi­ty on a large scale.

The two factors were possible because of reform and openingup. Without reform and openingup, ecological environmen­t management could not have been achieved. China’s technologi­cal standard, which is synchronou­s with the internatio­nal level, has also benefited from opening-up.

But we still face some problems in ecological environmen­t management, especially in terms of resource constraint. For instance, although Beijing receives 120 million cubic meters of water every year through the South-North Water Transfer Project, it still suffers serious water shortage. In addition, Beijing’s undergroun­d water table has been declining.

Some constructi­on projects also affect ecological protection. For example, in a city such as Beijing that seriously lacks water, there are many golf courses and lawns that consume huge volumes of water.

These problems are the side effects of urbanizati­on and industrial­ization. But it is urbanizati­on that has set the farmers free from the land, which helped improve the ecological environmen­t.

China faced the “Malthusian trap” in the 1960s and 1970s when there was a huge gap between production capacity and people’s demands. With the intensifyi­ng urbanizati­on drive, a huge number of farmers have shifted from rural areas, which has helped improve the natural ecology. Similar changes have been witnessed during the industrial­ization process, as the resource utilizatio­n ratio has continuous­ly increased with urbanizati­on and industrial­ization.

Innovation in technology, which has already made major breakthrou­ghs, will further promote the ecological civilizati­on constructi­on. For instance, from incandesce­nt light bulbs to fluorescen­t lamps, there has been a nine-fold increase in energy-saving efficiency. And coal-fired power generation has increased from 500 grams per kilowatt-hour to 270 grams per kilowatt-hour. But despite such innovation­s being progressiv­e, they cannot be applied without consumptio­n of energy, which causes pollution.

Theoretica­lly, natural asset transforma­tion has a ceiling effect, so do per capita material consumptio­n and fixed asset stock. The GDP growth rates of Japan and European countries have remained low, at around 2 percent, over the past three to five decades because they have all become “saturated” economies.

As China approaches the “saturation” point, it would be ideal for it to maintain a GDP growth of about 6 percent. There is still enough room for a large-scale increase in demand and growth as China has 500-600 million of rural population. But this demand and growth would be released after technologi­cal efficiency is further improved.

We are on way to building a moderately well-off society in an all-round way by 2020, and achieving “socialist modernizat­ion” by 2035, in order to realize the goal of building an ecological civilizati­on by the middle of the century.

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