China
implements 100 clean energy projects to aid Africa |
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China has been carrying out clean energy projects in more
than ten African countries to help the continent -- believed
one of the largest victims of climate change by some experts
-- tackle the multiple effects it brings, a foreign affairs
official said.
In order to improve African countries' abilities to adapt
to climate change, China has been actively implementing 100
clean energy projects including solar power, biogas and small
hydropower projects in Africa, said Lu Shaye, director-general
of the Department of African Affairs at the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, said at the on-going China-Africa Think Tank Forum
(CATTF) held in the eastern city of Hangzhou.
Lu said China has worked out country-specific plans and signed
exchange of notes on setting up projects with 11 countries,
including Ethiopia and Mozambique. Relevant projects will
start in the near future.
Experts say while Africa contributes only 4 percent of greenhouse
gas emissions, it is the continent most affected due to its
lack of capacity to adapt to climate change, including persistent
drought that destroys farm produce and threatens the already
fragile food security in some parts of Africa.
Africa is energy resource rich but power poor. According
to Africa Union Commission document, at current trends less
than 40 percent of African countries will reach universal
access to electricity by 2050.
"We want to tell Africa that when they are developing
the energy sector, they should learn from China's experience
not to take the format of polluting-and-then-cleaning-up.
Africa should develop clean energy from the very start,"
said Pang Zhongying, a professor of International Relations
at Renmin University of China.
The 100 clean energy projects were proposed by Premier Wen
Jiabao at the fourth ministerial conference of the Forum On
China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in 2009 as part of the eight
new measures the Chinese government has taken to strengthen
China-Africa cooperation.
Since the launch of FOCAC in 2000, China and Africa have
cemented solid political and diplomatic ties, significantly
boosted economic relations, and broadened areas of cooperation.
China is now Africa's largest trading partner. By the end
of 2010, China had invested around 40 billion U.S. dollars
in over 2,000 enterprises from 50 African countries and regions.
These companies cover a variety of sectors, including agriculture,
mining, manufacturing and finance. Direct investment by Chinese
enterprises in Africa amounted to 2.1 billion U.S. dollars
in 2010, an increase of 46.8 percent over the previous year,
according to statistics from the Ministry of Commerce.
Many scholars attending the CATTF said climate change should
be a priority in Sino-African cooperation.
Pang said low-carbon promotion is only a temporary solution
to climate change, and that Africa should seek ways to make
full use of its resources while developing clean energy.
Pang said the 100 projects can be seen as laying the foundation
for long-term Sino-African cooperation to combat climate change.
Source: Xinhua
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