国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

China steps up efforts to cut emissions

(Xinhua)

2010-10-18 09

BEIJING - With a growing multitude of smokestacks dismantled and polluting factories closed, China is scaling up its often painful efforts to curb greenhouse gas emissions and boost energy efficiency.

The Chinese government is currently deliberating the 12th Five-Year Plan for China's development from 2011-2015, a critical period for the country to meet its target set last year to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions per GDP unit by 40-45 percent by 2020 from the level of 2005.

"It's not easy to achieve it," Barbara Finamore, a senior member of the US-based environmental group National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), said earlier this month in the Chinese city of Tianjin on the sidelines of the latest round of UN climate change talks.

China has successfully slowed down its CO2 emissions growth in the past five years, but without continued efforts to improve energy efficiency and diversify its energy structure, it would only be able to reduce carbon intensity by 37 percent by 2020 from the 2005 level, added Finamore, director of the NRDC's China program.

Striking a similar tone, Fatih Birol, chief economist of the International Energy Agency (IEA), said China's development in the next five years will be crucial for meeting the challenges in energy and the environment.

Their cautious comments resonated with those of many Chinese experts and officials who note that after picking the low-hanging fruit in the initial stage, emission-cutting efforts will become inceasingly difficult in later phases.

In order to deploy the green technologies needed to achieve substantial improvements, China needs to make an additional investment of 1.9 trillion to 3.4 trillion yuan ($285.7 billion to $511.3 billion) in the 12th Five Year Plan period, up from the 1.5 trillion yuan during the previous five years, according to a report released by McKinsey & Company, a global management-consulting firm.

Further complicating the picture is the fact that China, the largest developing country in the world, is in the middle of rapid industrialization and urbanization, and also faces a host of other challenging tasks -- from developing the economy to eliminating poverty and improving people's livelihoods.

China has encountered a whole load of environmental problems that have cropped up in the short space of a mere 30-odd years of rapid economic development, while the industrialized countries had coped with similar problems that accumulated during a span of more than 200 years of industrialization and were solved in a step-by-step manner, noted Xie Zhenhua, vice minister of the National Development and Reform Commission.

Even against such a backdrop, China will not follow in the footsteps of some developed countries whose greenhouse gas emissions are still rising while their per capita GDP has already exceeded $40,000 per year, Xie said.

The Chinese government started to address the CO2 emissions issue with concrete moves when the country's per capita GDP was only around $3,000, he stressed.

Beijing will realize its green targets even if the emission cutting endeavors would reduce the growth rate of China's GDP, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said firmly at the Summer Davos forum in September in Tianjin.

China's immense green efforts and firm resolve have also been lauded by many in developed countries. "While America's Republicans turned 'climate change' into a four-letter word - JOKE, China's Communists also turned it into a four-letter word - JOBS," Thomas L. Friedman, a columnist for The New York Times and author of the book "The World is Flat," wrote in a recent article.

Related readings:
China steps up efforts to cut emissions Slower population growth may reduce global emissions
China steps up efforts to cut emissions Poorer nations seek help in global warming
China steps up efforts to cut emissions China demands greater reduction in gas emissions
China steps up efforts to cut emissions China's carbon trade a test for government, business

In view of China's closure of small and inefficient coal-burning power plants with a total generating capacity of 70 GW during the past five years and local authorities' all-out efforts during recent months to meet their green goals for the 11th Five Year Plan period, the London-based Financial Time carried a report in September speaking highly of Beijing's serious attitude toward emissions cuts.

In 2009, China surpassed the United States as the country with the largest investments in clean energy, according to the 2010 Global Trends in Sustainable Energy Investment report released by the UN Environment Programme.

The report noted that last year, China saw its private and public investment in key clean energy fields, namely new reneable energy, biofuels and energy efficiency, leap 53 percent from the previous year, and its renewable energy generation capacity increase by 37 GW.

In many ways, China is doing exactly what a properly governed developing country should do, said Johathan Holslag, head of research at the Brussels Institute of Contemporary China Studies.

The Asian country is trying to "lift its people out of poverty while trying to reduce the negative effects of industrialization," Holslag said."Thus far, it has performed this balancing act remarkably well."

"It has invested massively in improving the efficiency of its economy and has committed to reducing the energy intensity of its industrial production to a level that could herald a new stage of green growth," the expert added.

In its march toward a low-carbon economy, China has made it a state priority to build an ecological civilization and has put in place an accountibility system in its emissions-cutting undertaking.

In many important fields, China's efforts to deal with climate change are exemplary and there is much the United States and many other countries can learn from, said Finamore with the NRDC.

Airbus China increases eco-awareness

An Airbus A320 model containing a fuel cell demonstrator displayed at the Shanghai Expo had attracted tens of thousands of visitors.

GM unveils Chevy EV at the Expo

General Motor revealed its electric car, the Chevrolet Volt, in Shanghai on Aug 31. It will serve the World Expo as VIP transportation.

China's 1st electric car sold to individual

Last week little-known carmaker Zotye Auto became the first Chinese company to sell a purely electric car to an individual.

China Wind Power 2010 Conference&Exhibition

China Wind Power 2010 is the largest and most important international wind power conference and exhibition in China.

TradeWinds Shipping China 2010

TradeWinds Shipping China 2010 moves to Beijing to examine every important facet of how the shipping industry's fortunes are linked to China.

2010 Outdoor Lifestyle Hangzhou Fair

Outdoor Lifestyle Hangzhou Fair will attract reputed suppliers, buyers and agents from around the globe and it will offer numerous opportunities.

泰和县| 高台县| 肃北| 漳平市| 广昌县| 金沙县| 曲麻莱县| 日照市| 津市市| 宣恩县| 麻江县| 新化县| 柘城县| 滨海县| 成安县| 基隆市| 年辖:市辖区| 滨海县| 伽师县| 孝昌县| 江门市| 阿城市| 碌曲县| 舞钢市| 安溪县| 蒲城县| 涪陵区| 呼伦贝尔市| 嘉黎县| 安阳市| 旬阳县| 淮安市| 贵港市| 岢岚县| 营山县| 扶绥县| 偏关县| 东安县| 麻阳| 宁波市| 岑巩县|