China
soon to issue full plan to reduce carbon intensity |
|
|
China will soon release detailed plans on ensuring that its
goal for reducing carbon intensity from 2011 to 2015 is attainable,
and it has started looking at technical options for cutting
carbon dioxide emissions after 2020.
Xie Zhenhua, vice-minister of the National Development and
Reform Commission (NDRC), said at a conference that a comprehensive
plan to allow China to meet its objective - laid out in the
12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) - of reducing carbon intensity
by 17 percent reduction will be released soon.
China has set a target to cut its energy intensity (the amount
of energy consumed for each unit of GDP) by 16 percent and
reduce its carbon intensity (the amount of carbon emitted
for each unit of GDP) by 17 percent from 2011 to 2015.
The targets surely need to be handed over to local governments,
and a specialized blueprint for cutting greenhouse-gas emissions
is a necessity," Su Wei, director-general of the Department
of Climate Change of the NDRC, told China Daily.
According to a draft plan released in January, the areas
will be divided into five types with various energy intensity
reduction goals ranging from 10 percent to 18 percent.
The target is a step in the government's pledge to cut carbon
intensity by 40 to 45 percent from 2005 levels by 2020.
The NDRC has also begun working out ways to attain further,
large-scale reductions of carbon dioxide emissions after 2020.
Xie said that China considers carbon capture and storage
(CCS) an important technical means of reducing carbon dioxide
emissions in the next few decades, and that the country should
already be working toward the development of the emerging
technology.
CCS development faces great uncertainties worldwide because
of the high costs and safety concerns, and several projects
in developed countries were halted last year.
Despite the challenges, China won't rule out CCS as a key
technical option in the future, but its use will depend on
its competitiveness and the global demands for emissions reduction,
he added.
Xie called for international collaboration in research and
technology transfers from developed countries.
China has set targets to boost its non-fossil-fuel use to
15 percent of energy consumption by 2020, and many obsolete
and inefficient coal-fired power plants have been closed.
However, coal remains the primary source of energy in China,
the world's largest consumer of coal, with more than 70 percent
of the country's energy consumption depending on it.
Foreign companies count on China to take a leading role in
the commercialization of CCS, but according to Su, China sees
CCS mainly as a means of reducing carbon dioxide after 2020
and 2030.
Source: China Daily
|