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Wednesday 25 October 2017

China committed to making world green again

China’s pursuit of modernization is aimed at establishing total harmony between human beings and nature, said General Secretary Xi Jinping in his holistic report at the opening of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China on Oct 18.
Adding that more efforts are needed to boost green growth, reduce pollution, protect the ecosystem and reform the ecological supervision system, Xi said China’s ecosystem will see fundamental improvements between 2020 and 2035. That goal is in line with the country’s pledge to cut carbon emissions per unit of GDP by 60-65 percent from the 2005 level by 2030. It also honors the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement and manifests China’s inclination to build an ecological civilization.
Over the past five years China has been scrupulously developing an eco-friendly economic growth model, by adapting a green, lowcarbon approach, and its efforts seem to be paying off.
During the 12th Five-Year Plan period (2011-15), the country reduced its carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP by 20 percent, which is roughly 2.34 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide, according to World Resources Institute.
China’s industrial sector, which accounts for 70 percent of its total carbon emissions, is expected to see major improvements as progress has been made in nourishing the service sector and reducing the industry’s dependence on energy, especially fossil fuels. For example, the service sector accounted for 51.6 percent of China’s GDP in 2016, about 11.8 percentage points higher than the industrial sector.
Consumption of fossil fuels, particularly coal, has shrunk accordingly as the country taps into renewable resources. By 2015, China had an installed non-fossil fuel energy generation capacity of 1,525 gigawatts, almost three times more than in 2005. By the end of last year, it had an installed capacity of 77 gigawatts of photovoltaic power; the figure for 2011 was just 2 gigawatts. And coal accounted for 63.7 percent of total energy consumption in 2015, 8.7 percentage points lower than in 2005.
Since 2011 at least 87 low-carbon pilot cities across the country have been working on green development. Most of them aspire to reach their peak carbon emissions before 2030; cities including Beijing and Guangzhou in South China’s Guangdong province even intend to achieve that goal by 2020.
China also aims to become the world’s largest market for carbon emission permits, which refers to the buying and selling of carbon permits and credits to emit carbon dioxide. The seven pilot cities traded permits for 120 million tons of carbon dioxide worth 3.2 billion yuan ($492 million) by last September, and a nationwide carbon trading market is underway.
The Paris Climate Agreement is aimed at keeping the average global rise in temperature below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, and preferably below 1.5 C. That said, global greenhouse gas emission is expected to peak by 2020, and China, one of the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitters, is likely to make a big difference to it with its emissionreduction endeavors at home and abroad.
The 20 billion yuan SouthSouth Cooperation Fund on Climate Change marks a historic move for Beijing, which has also promised to help developing countries build low carbon demonstration areas, provide personnel training and donate energysaving renewable energy facilities. And the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative, which shares the low-carbon ambition, will help the country to keep contributing to global green growth now that the United States has withdrawn from the Paris agreement.
Surely, the vision and approach are a timely update of the three-step strategy of Deng Xiaoping in the 1980s for China’s modernization. They are encouraging in that they could positively reshape the world’s power structure.
In fact, one day after Xi delivered the speech, European Union leaders gathered in Brussels for their two-day “autumn summit”. Although the EU leaders meet regularly under the framework of the European Council, which decides the bloc’s political direction, an important outcome of last week’s EU meeting was, to some extent, similar to Xi’s 2050 vision as the EC unequivocally endorsed the “Leaders’ Agenda” drafted by EC President Donald Tusk.
But in essence, the EU still seems obsessed with crisis management, as the aim of this concrete work is to prepare a guide for the bloc to negotiate the Brexit talks, and resolve the migration crisis, strengthen internal security, implement eurozone reforms and improve trade. Tusk’s approach is praiseworthy, not least because he knows what should be high on his political agenda.
Still, Tusk can and should do more, especially as the world is still wondering what the future has in store for the EU and people in the EU have the right to know what the lives of their children and grandchildren be like.
The EU badly needs a blueprint, for example, to close the development gap between Western and Eastern Europe, because one of the most important principles of the bloc is to ensure people within the vast geographical boundary of the EU lead the same quality of life.
Xi has already made it clear in his speech that the Party’s main mission is to resolve the contradiction between unbalanced and inadequate development and the people’s ever-growing needs for a better life to ensure everybody leads a prosperous and beautiful life.
The next China-EU summit will be held in Beijing next year. And EU leaders would do good to study Xi’s speech to understand where the Party gets its longterm vision from and whether it is, even partly, applicable to the EU, for that would give them more material to work for the success of the China-EU summit.
The EU leaders should study Xi’s speech also to explore what opportunities China would offer once it evolves into a great modern socialist country by 2050, which could be a new and important incentive for further improving China-EU relations.

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