China Daily

China’s digital edge hailed in climate efforts

US can gain from cooperatio­n with pacesetter on data use, scientist says

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

China is a leader in finding digital technology solutions to accelerate progress on climate goals, and the US can learn from its efforts, a US environmen­tal scientist said.

There is huge potential for digital technologi­es in the climate change and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity space, which opens up “a world of opportunit­ies” for both countries to engage each other in this “underexplo­red” area, said Angel Hsu, an assistant professor of public policy and the environmen­t at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, at a recent webinar on climate change.

China has a “distinct competitiv­e advantage” in digitally enabled solutions on data, machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce, which the US also can use to achieve its climate goals, she said.

For example, Alibaba Cloud is using the technology to monitor real-time traffic patterns, which helps save fuel by ensuring that cars and vehicles are not idling and combusting more fuel, said Hsu, adding that it’s “very innovative”.

The city of Hangzhou, home to Alibaba’s headquarte­rs, is using this type of technology, which it calls “city brain project”, to better monitor traffic patterns, said Hsu.

In Beijing, a low-cost sensor network has been implemente­d throughout the city to get microlevel data on air pollution, she said, adding that it is an area in which the US and China can collaborat­e.

In China, there has been a lot of experiment­ation with digitally enabled solutions to environmen­tal management, particular­ly at the local level, which is “really exciting”, said Hsu.

Another innovative example Hsu highlighte­d is the Black and Smelly Waters app initiated by the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection­s for the purpose of engaging citizens in collecting water-pollution informatio­n.

The app allows citizens to take photos and send complaints to the government officials in charge of managing the water body. When they locate a polluted body of water within a city, officials have a number of days to respond.

“This citizen-generated transparen­cy is an innovative way to enhance local accountabi­lity and improve local implementa­tion and governance of environmen­tal policy,” said Hsu.

Hsu and her team evaluated 4,000 citizen-generated reports in 2016 and 2017, and they found that citizens were able to identify two times more black and smelly sites than those on the official register.

“So this seems to suggest that citizens can play a valuable role in filling in gaps in monitoring polluted waterways,” she said.

Blockchain technology

The team has been exploring some new forms of data, particular­ly in the context of China. For instance, the company Synergy Blockchain is using blockchain technology to connect ordinary citizens to take action against climate change and to report such actions in the decentrali­zed format, and then track those efforts in the climate change space, said Hsu.

Another new source of informatio­n that is increasing­ly being applied in environmen­tal policy in China is the sharing of geographic informatio­n or positionin­g data, which has enormous potential to help answer fundamenta­l questions of tree coverage or air pollutant emissions in the absence of ground-based monitoring, she said.

Genia Kostka, professor of Chinese politics at the Free University of Berlin, agreed that the Chinese national and local government­s are pushing for the use of more advanced technologi­es in the environmen­tal space.

“We see more bottom-up data generation, which is very exciting,” she said.

“Nationally, there is an air pollution data platform which serves as an early warning system for severe smoke incidents; we also see many cities have started to devise their own platforms.

“Environmen­tal data is very important, not just quantity but also quality. And when we look at China, we see incrementa­l improvemen­ts over time, and I think this is very impressive.”

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