Going Clean: New Research Shows How China Can Adopt Low-carbon Growth

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8th December 2009, 07:20pm - Views: 662






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MEDIA RELEASE PR37462


Going Clean: New Research Shows how China can Adopt low-Carbon Growth


BEIJING, Dec. 8 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet / --


    Results released today from a detailed economic study show that China may cut carbon emissions deeply

and minimise the adverse effects on its economy over the next 40 years. The report, Going Clean: the

economics of China's low-carbon development, by the Chinese Economists 50 Forum and Stockholm

Environment Institute, says that emission reductions up to 2050 can be made for example through:


    - Energy efficiency gains through improved building design, standards for 

      electrical appliances and the use of less energy-intensive materials


    - A massive shift towards the use of renewable energy such as wind and

      solar energy, municipal solid waste and biomass, and small hydropower


    - Electric vehicles for road transport


    - Using Carbon Capture and Storage technology in new coal-fired power

      plants


    - A better international cooperation mechanism that can channel more

      finance and technologies from developed countries


    The report by Chinese, Swedish, German, British and American experts says that these changes would

also present opportunities for China to improve its energy security and move its economy higher up the

international value chain.


    "A low-carbon China is a country with a larger service sector, more advanced labour skills and less

environmental degradation," said Dr FAN Gang, Director of the National Economic Research Institute in

China, who led the research in China. "Such a transition would also be an essential part of China's

development."


    China is currently one of the 10 most carbon-intensive economies in the world, meaning that it has a high

carbon footprint in relation to the level of economic activity. "Avoiding dangerous climate change requires the

world to act together to cut global emissions. Developed countries are largely responsible for the past build up

in global green house gas emissions but future responsibility is shared by developed and developing countries

alike," said Lord Nicholas Stern, report author and Professor at the London School of Economics. "This

important report demonstrates that China can take strong and decisive action to reduce its carbon emissions,

whilst continuing its economic growth and delivering a prosperous and a harmonious society for its people."


    "China will be one of the countries most adversely affected by dangerous climate change. Avoiding

dangerous climate change is in the best interest of China," said Professor Ottmar Edenhofer, report author,

deputy director and chief economist of the Potsdam Institute of Climate Impact Research. "The study

demonstrates that China can combine a high economic growth path with ambitious emission reductions. This

is the reason why China has the potential to become a role model for other economies in transition."


    Going Clean recommends a phase-out of fossil fuel subsidies and for carbon to be priced more highly,

either through a carbon tax or a global cap-and-trade system. "With today's low prices, the incentives for a

low-carbon transition are not strong enough. But this can change," said Dr Fan Gang. The report shows that it

is technologically feasible for China to reach a 2 degrees pathway and estimates that the savings from lower

energy use and other efficiencies will partly offset the costs of transformation. "High-income countries account

for a vast majority of global emissions to date and need to shoulder this responsibility through financial support

to developing countries," said Professor Johan Rockstrom, Executive Director of the Stockholm Environment

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Institute. "To make this a reality, Going Clean proposes a new international finance mechanism - the Inter-

country Joint Mitigation Plan - as a broader and more efficient way of financing technology

transfers." 


    "Consumption and production patterns also need to be steered in a more resource- sustainable direction,"

said Klas Eklund, report author and Senior Economist at the Nordic bank SEB. "As the world's most populous

country and the largest emitter of greenhouse gases, China's role is critical in combating global climate

change. Thus, effective economic tools to curb emissions are necessary."


    The shift to a low-carbon economy will hit coal-fired power and some heavy industries, but will also create

new 'green jobs'. In the first half of 2009, China built more wind turbines than the US. Low-carbon transport is

growing - there are currently over 50 million electric bikes and motorcycles in the country, and China is now

leading the mass production of electric hybrid cars.


    "Even in these difficult economic times, climate change action may present more opportunities than costs,"

said Professor Johan Rockstrom. "Such a transformation, for China and the rest of the world, will not be easy.

But it is possible, necessary and worthwhile to pursue."


    The Chinese 50 Economists Forum is a Beijing-based grouping of Chinese economists for collaborative

research and public discussion of China's economy. The Stockholm Environment Institute is an independent,

non-profit research organization bridging science and policy for sustainable development.


    - Going Clean - The Economics of China's Low-Carbon Development will be 

      launched in Beijing on 8 December 2009, 12:00 at the Raffles Beijing

      Hotel.





    SOURCE: Stockholm Environment Institute and the Chinese Economists

    











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