Developing a Green Economy in Response to Climate Change

来源 :CHINA TODAY | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:stone88822
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  CLIMATE change is a global issue. The spike in carbon dioxide emissions worldwide incurred by burning fossil fuels has hampered the sustainable development of the world’s economy, society, and eco-environment, and consequently prompted nations all over the world to transform their growth patterns towards low-carbon.
  Low-carbon development is vital to addressing climate change. Scientists have corroborated the legitimacy of climate change, and the significance and urgency of the issue are widely acknowledged. In this context, the notion of low-carbon development is spreading fast, and endorsed by the international community. The solution to climate change lies in low-carbon development, and the threat of climate change is the strongest motivation for low-carbon development.
  Government Support
  Green development is an obligation that China, along with the rest of the world, is eager to meet to grapple with climate change. It is also demanded in light of the country’s sustainable growth. With guiding policies, relevant institutions, and practical experiences all in place, the conditions for developing a green economy are ripe for China.
  China sees a valued opportunity to transform its economic growth pattern in fighting climate change and nurturing a low-carbon economy, which also serve its goal of advancing ecological progress. Its 13th FiveYear Plan (2016-20) articulates that China will explore the establishment of a mechanism to control both the intensity and volume of carbon emissions during this period.


  In 2007, the National Leading Group to Address Climate Change was established to lead the national program in this regard. The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) was vested to undertake the general work concerning climate change, and relevant departments and governments at various levels take corresponding accountabilities. People from all walks of life are also encouraged to participate. The powers and responsibilities are explicitly divided between regional governments and administrations to realize specific emission reduction goals.
  Remarkable progress has been made in this aspect so far. By 2015, China’s carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP had slumped by 38.6 percent from that of 2005 and 21.7 percent from 2010 (Chart 1). The fall in greenhouse gas discharge was also noticeable for this period.
  In 2015, non-fossil fuels’ share in China’s consumption of primary energy had climbed to 12 percent (Chart 2), surpassing the 11.4 percent goal set in the nation’s 12th Five-Year Plan. China is advancing low-carbon development on all fronts through overarching planning, institutional support, infrastructure, capacity building, and pilot programs, which all lay a solid foundation for climate change adaptation.   Challenges and Opportunities
  In the experience of industrialized countries, like Germany and the U.K., low-carbon development began with reflection on the frustration of sustainable development under industrialization. This self-reflection led to innovation in technologies and institutions, transformation of human production and consumption, as well as efforts to lower carbon emissions by using green energies.
  Developing countries face dual tasks – eschewing the high-consumption, high-emission, and high-pollution approach of industrialization that many developed countries took, and striking a balance between economic, social, and environmental progress. They must explore a new paradigm that allows them to modernize at a relatively low carbon emission level. Compared with their developed peers, China and other developing countries have huge innovation and transformation potentials to develop a low-carbon economy. The tasks and challenges facing them in this aspect, however, are manifold.
  The general trend of global development, the orientation of China’s overall strategies, and the traits of China’s urbanization all open up good opportunities for the country’s low-carbon development. On a global scale, the green trend has taken off. The Paris Agreement passed at the 2015 UN Climate Change Conference embodies the broadest consensus of the international community on limiting global warming, and expresses their commitment to green development. Changing to low-carbon development is an irreversible trend, and all countries should jump on the wagon.
  At the national level, China has formulated national strategies that chart the course for green growth. At the 18th CPC National Congress, making ecological progress was listed as one of five goals in building Chinese socialism, along with economic, political, cultural, and social progress. Under this guidance, China sets targets to limit the volume of carbon discharge in a bid to nurture low-carbon production and consumption modes, optimize industrial and energy structures, and improve energy efficiency. This is expected to create a synergistic effect between low-carbon development and environmental protection that will further boost China’s ecological progress.
  Regionally, the ongoing new-type urbanization in China has set the stage for its low-carbon development. A review of the nation’s urbanization history reveals that the creation and expansion of cities invariably came at the cost of high carbon emissions. At present, cities and towns emit 90 percent of the national total for carbon dioxide. There is huge scope for slashing energy consumption in urban construction and daily life. Starting from the 12th Five-Year Plan period (2011-15) China has carried out low-carbon urbanization pilot programs in many provinces, cities, towns, districts, and communities, as well as in transportation and other sectors, which all contribute to the nation’s climate change adaptation and low-carbon development.




  The penalties of the carbon-intensive model of development are now pronounced, but the obstacles to pursuing sustainable development are steep. First, it is hard to overcome the lock-in effect of the old highcarbon development pattern. The six energy-intensive industries, including oil refineries, nuclear fuel processing, chemical industry and nonmetal mineral products, account for one third of China’s industrial output, and three fourths of the total industrial energy consumption. The lock-in effect of high-carbon industries and associated infrastructures cannot be ameliorated over a short period. Meanwhile, accelerated urbanization and rising living standard in China will contribute to higher carbon emissions in the coming years.
  Second, low-carbon development calls for a sound legal system. Global experience testifies that low-carbon development, as a long-term development strategy of a nation, should be made into laws to give it an institutional guarantee. China, so far, has no such national statutes. And the existing industry-wide regulations are not sufficiently legally binding. What’s more, a policy system must be established to provide institutional support for low-carbon development in the future.
  Third, the nation needs to gain a full and correct understanding of low-carbon development. Certain local governments and businesses have not grasped the full imperativeness and importance of low-carbon development, and still hold fast to certain misbeliefs, such as that low-carbon development stifles economic growth. As for the general public, most consumers cannot wean themselves off their old consumption habits, which lead to high energy use and discharges. The education of the public has to be continued and enhanced.


  Green development is in the interest of people’s wellbeing and the future of the nation. It is needed for China’s realization of the “two centennial goals,” and meshes with the country’s strategies of transforming its economic growth mode, adjusting economic structure, and propelling the new industrial revolution. As the world’s largest developing country, China takes on multiple missions – boosting economy, eliminating poverty, improving people’s livelihood, preserving the environment, and coping with climate change. Despite difficulties and challenges on the path of low-carbon development, China, as President Xi Jinping declared, will adhere to the strategy of a sustainable, green, and circular development model, and the basic state policy of saving resources and preserving the environment. China will advance low-carbon development at home through substantive acts, and meanwhile join global efforts to boost sustainable development worldwide.
其他文献
MR. Cao hadn’t told anyone his son was visiting today. After lunch, he rested for a while on a bamboo chair and then he and his wife went out arm-in-arm. He pondered the commemorative couplet he was t
期刊
ON the meter gauge railway of Kuala Lumpur, capital of Malaysia, an electric multiple unit (EMU) runs at a speed of 160 km per hour. Compared with the speed of over 300 km per hour of high-speed train
期刊
THE Ninth BRICS Summit, themed “BRICS: Stronger Partnership for a Brighter Future,”wrapped up in early September in Xiamen, Fujian Province, kicking off a second decade of BRICS cooperation. In his sp
期刊
THE Loess Plateau of Shaanxi Province has traditionally been a poverty-stricken area. Local farmers would grow grains like winter wheat and spring corn, and every July, August, and September plow the
期刊
AERIAL cycling is amazing. The winding cycleway traverses Xiamen’s busy downtown area. You know, it’s really fantastic to enjoy the city’s spectacular landscape while cycling and chatting with your fr
期刊
LOCATED in one of China’s less economically developed regions, Haixi Mongolian and Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Qinghai Province, is grappling with the conundrum of how to attain rapid economic deve
期刊
I’M very happy that I’ve received a national award for science and technology in China. You know, President Xi Jinping personally presented that prize to me. I was so excited that I didn’t wash my han
期刊
WITH a romantic and el- egant ambience, the West Bund area in Shanghai, which once scintillated on the Maritime Silk Road, continues to thrive today.  Longteng Avenue, on the West Bund, stretches like
期刊
AT the “International Exchanges on Open Innovation” held in San Francisco in 2015, one question was raised: “If you were an engineer and would like to make a creative idea into a product within one or
期刊
DURING his inspection tour of Qinghai Province in August this year Chinese President Xi Jinping observed that “the most valuable part of Qinghai is its ecology, in which lie the province’s most import
期刊