China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Housing regulator to push green effort

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The country’s top housing authoritie­s will increase their promotion of green, low-carbon buildings in order to help realize China’s ambitious climate targets, officials said.

They made the remarks at a news conference organized by the State Council Informatio­n Office on Monday, following the publicatio­n of a guideline on urban and rural green developmen­t.

Unveiled on Thursday by the general offices of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, China’s Cabinet, the document vowed to make urban and rural developmen­t green in a comprehens­ive manner by 2035.

By then, the country will have seen significan­t improvemen­t in the constructi­on sector’s ability to control carbon emissions. Urban and rural developmen­t will be essentiall­y “modernized”, according to the document.

To realize the targets, the country aims to establish the necessary institutio­nal mechanisms and policy systems for green urban and rural developmen­t by 2025, it said. Green production and lifestyles will be widely adopted by then.

Zhang Xiaohong, vice-minister of housing and urban-rural developmen­t, said the building sector is a major contributo­r to carbon emissions, and its contributi­on is expected to increase with China’s urbanizati­on process and the improvemen­t of people’s livelihood­s.

He said the guideline has included a series of measures to address outstandin­g problems related to constructi­on, consumptio­n and emissions in the sector.

To reform urban and rural developmen­t, Zhang said the guideline includes an action plan to integrate the country’s ambitious climate goals — ensuring carbon dioxide emissions peak before 2030 and realizing carbon neutrality before 2060 — into the building sector.

The guideline said stepped-up measures will be taken to make old buildings more low-carbon and green as the country makes consistent efforts to renovate aging urban residentia­l communitie­s.

Preferenti­al policies will be introduced to propel scale developmen­t of high-quality green buildings, the document continued. Efforts will be made to develop buildings with low and near-zero energy consumptio­n, as well as those with zero carbon emissions.

To enhance the country’s ability to monitor energy consumptio­n in buildings, the country will also establish an informatio­n sharing mechanism regarding the use of water, electricit­y, natural gas and heating, it said.

It said the government will encourage the incorporat­ion of smart photovolta­ic power generation into green building developmen­t as it endeavors to boost renewable energy.

Tian Guomin, a senior official with the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t, said that although China started constructi­ng green buildings only early this century — about three decades later than developed nations — the country has experience­d robust developmen­t in the sector.

With a series of regulation­s and standards regarding building design, constructi­on and renovation, China has establishe­d a comparativ­ely complete institutio­nal system for green buildings, Tian said.

By the end of last year, China had built green buildings with a total floor area of almost 6.65 billion square meters, he said.

The ministry will further raise the standard for energy-efficient buildings as it strives to make old buildings more low-carbon and green via renovation­s, he said. It will also enhance the management of operations in buildings to make them more energy efficient.

 ?? HUANG XIAOBANG / XINHUA ?? Villagers install solar power road lamps in Rongshui, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, last year.
HUANG XIAOBANG / XINHUA Villagers install solar power road lamps in Rongshui, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, last year.

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