DM Monitoring
BEIJING: The outbreak of the global health emergency has propelled the world to take further strides toward a green revolution.
China has announced that it will be increasingly embracing green and inclusive development, with a slew of eco-friendly measures taken amid its “V-shaped” recovery.
The country has also vowed to strive to bring carbon emissions to a peak before 2030 and become carbon-neutral before 2060. In announcing such measures, China is not simply paying lip service to environmental concerns. A report published last month by global ratings agency Moody’s showed that China, along with wealthier countries, took the lead in spending on green recovery in the Asia-Pacific region.
Coal-fired power remains a major energy source in China, which has long pursued clean power and has become the world’s largest producer and user of renewable energy.
During the post-epidemic recovery, the country has introduced a package of green stimulus measures, and has seen a surge in the installed capacity of clean energy.
In the fourth quarter of 2020, the installed capacity of photovoltaics in China reached 29.5 million kilowatts, while that of wind power increased by 57.75 million kilowatts, both far exceeding the combined installed capacity in the first three quarters, data from the National Energy Administration (NEA) showed.
China’s clean-energy consumption accounted for 24.5 percent of the total energy consumption in 2020, up 1.1 percentage points compared with that in 2019, data from the NEA showed. According to a Deutsche Bank report, by 2030, China is expected to see its output of solar power increase tenfold, while that of wind power will be three or four times the level in 2020.
Green energy has shown great market potential, with the country promising to bring its total installed capacity of wind and solar power to over 1.2 billion kilowatts by 2030.
Qian Zhimin, chairman of the State Power Investment Corporation Ltd., has predicted that the newly-installed capacity for these two kinds of clean energy will require over 12 trillion yuan (about 1.85 trillion U.S. dollars) of investment by 2030.
Starting Monday, China implemented a set of interim rules for the management of carbon-emissions trading designed to drive down the emissions of big power users.
Under the scheme, firms that exceed the emission caps can buy emission quotas from others with a lower carbon footprint.
A total of 2,225 power firms are included in the project. More fields, such as the steel and aluminum production sectors, will be included in future carbon trading.
Global market players have already smelled money in China’s green ambition.
EN+ Group, a global producer of low-carbon aluminum, has teamed up with its Chinese counterpart to produce the same product, reflecting the surging demand for greener products and materials in China.
“Considering that China is set to see further substantial economic growth in 2021, the country will remain the biggest global primary aluminum market,” said Lord Barker, Chairman of EN+ Group.
The group will continue expanding its business in China and cooperate with its Chinese partners to research and develop new high-quality low-carbon products, said Lord Barker.
SUEZ Group, a global expert in the water and waste sectors, also regards China’s carbon-neutrality pledge as a great opportunity for the company’s development in the country.