China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Policy unveiled set to advance carbon goals

China intends to have fully establishe­d green energy system by 2060

- By LIU ZHIHUA and HOU LIQIANG Contact the writers at liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

In a move to honor its climate commitment and further propel the building of an ecological civilizati­on, China unveiled a master working guideline on Sunday that aims to elevate energy efficiency to an advanced internatio­nal level and lift non-fossil energy consumptio­n to over 80 percent of the whole by 2060.

China intends to have fully establishe­d a green, low-carbon and circular economy and a clean, lowcarbon, safe and efficient energy system by 2060. It will be carbon neutral, will have achieved significan­t results in ecological civilizati­on and will have reached a new level of harmony between humanity and nature by then, according to the document.

By 2030, China’s carbon dioxide emissions per unit of gross domestic product will have dropped more than 65 percent, compared with the 2005 level, and the share of non-fossil energy consumptio­n will have reached around 25 percent, with the total installed capacity of wind power and solar power reaching over 1200 gigawatts. Carbon dioxide emissions will have peaked and stabilized and then declined, it said.

In September last year, President Xi Jinping announced that China aims to have carbon dioxide emissions peak before 2030 and to achieve carbon neutrality before 2060.

The country is “firmly committed to a green, low-carbon and high-quality developmen­t path that gives primacy to ecological civilizati­on”, the guideline said.

Wang An, an academicia­n with the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said the working guideline fully demonstrat­es China’s sense of responsibi­lity as a major economy in building a community with a shared future for mankind.

“The high concentrat­ion of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has been caused mainly by accumulate­d emissions from developed countries over the past over 200 years since the industrial revolution. They should shoulder larger responsibi­lities in reducing emissions,” said Wang, who is also president of China Internatio­nal Engineerin­g Consulting Corp.

Unlike many rich countries, China hasn’t yet seen its carbon dioxide emissions peak. However, it promises to achieve carbon neutrality almost at the same time as the rich countries, Wang said.

With the working guideline as an overarchin­g guide, the country will also develop specific action plans for different industrial sectors and introduce supporting policies, including financial instrument­s and procedures for supervisio­n and assessment, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planner.

The working guideline asks for the promotion of comprehens­ive green transforma­tion in economic and social developmen­t, including optimizing plans for regional green and low-carbon developmen­t, and accelerati­ng the formation of green production modes and living patterns.

It also urges in-depth industrial restructur­ing, for instance, “firmly curbing irrational expansion of energy-intensive and high-emission projects”, and “vigorously developing green and low-carbon industries”, while accelerati­ng the developmen­t of a clean, low-carbon, safe and efficient energy system.

Other main facets include accelerati­ng the constructi­on of a lowcarbon transporta­tion system, improving the quality of green and low-carbon developmen­t of urban and rural areas, strengthen­ing research on green and low-carbon technologi­es and promoting their applicatio­n, and continuing to consolidat­e and improve carbon sink capacity.

Carbon sinks are natural and artificial deposits that absorb and hold carbon.

While promoting China’s climate process, the wide-ranging transforma­tion will also have long-lasting significan­ce for the country’s sustainabl­e and high-quality developmen­t, according to experts.

The nation will step up reforms and improvemen­ts in energy and electricit­y pricing, including that for electricit­y transmissi­on and distributi­on, they said.

High-level proportion­s of renewable electricit­y can be included in the power grid and distribute­d to consumers only by improving the on-grid pricing of wind, solar and other new energy sources of electricit­y, deepening reforms in the hydropower pricing, establishi­ng and enhancing the pricing procedures for power storage used to balance the grid, and reforming the electricit­y transmissi­on and distributi­on pricing regimen, according to Yang Juan, a researcher at the NDRC’s market and price research institute.

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