China can cut its greenhouse emissions and achieve its goal of
reducing the use of energy by developing renewable energy and
improving energy efficiency, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
has said.
The Chinese version of a recent climate change report was
released yesterday, with the WWF saying the country can tackle the
challenges of climate change by resorting to the two suggested
solutions.
China's huge population and rapid economic development have
increased the demand for energy. Its total primary energy
consumption reached nearly 2.5 billion tons of coal equivalent last
year, the WWF report says.
But the country's energy efficiency contrasts at a low level of
only 33 percent. In fact, it only equals the level of developed
countries 20 years ago and far outclasses the world average energy
intensity of per unit GDP, the report says.
"The WWF report shows China still has enough room to improve
energy efficiency," said Chen Dongmei, director of Climate Change
and Energy Program of WWF China.
The government has set a goal of reducing energy consumption per
unit GDP by 20 percent during the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-10).
"Achieving this efficiency target will reduce carbon dioxide
(CO2) emission reduction by 1.5 billion tons, or 40 percent of
China's total CO2 emission in 2004," Chen said.
"Improving energy conservation and efficiency is the priority
for China if it wants to cut CO2 emissions."
WWF's proposals come mostly from the country's policy-making and
energy-saving technology adoption, he said.
The report, Climate Solutions: WWF's Vision for 2050,
was compiled by WWF's Energy Task Force, with contributions from
more than 100 scientists and experts.
It puts forward six solutions, including improving energy
efficiency, stopping deforestation, accelerating the development of
low-emission technologies, developing flexible fuels, replacing
high-carbon coal with low-carbon gas and equipping fossil-fuel
plants with carbon capture and storage technology.
The report concludes that a combined adoption of the solutions
would meet the world's expected two-fold demand for energy by 2050
without aggravating climate change, but the governments have a
limited period of time to agree on necessary measures for
change.
The WWF report has three imperatives: urgency, global effort and
leadership. Climate change is an issue every country has to tackle,
WWF China Country Representative Dermot O'Gorman said. Irrespective
of whether they are developed or developing, countries across the
world have to bear common but differentiated responsibility to
achieve the united goal.
Published just a week before the crucial UN climate conference
in Bali, this WWF road map shows solutions are at hand and are
affordable, O'Gorman said. Leaders at the Bali conference have to
agree on decisive action to ensure we stay below 2 C of temperature
rise.
All About
Energy saving,
Climate change
(
China Daily November 27, 2007)