Author Archive

Taking Out One Billion Tons of CO2: The Magic of China’s 11th Five Year Plan?

Abstract China’s 11th Five-Year Plan (FYP) sets an ambitious target for energy-efficiency improvement: energy intensity of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) should be reduced by 20% from 2005 to 2010 (NDRC, 2006). This is the first time that a quantitative and binding target has been set for energy efficiency, and signals a major shift in China’s strategic thinking about its long-term economic and energy development. The 20% energy intensity target also translates into an annual reduction of over one billion tons of CO2 by 2010, making the Chinese effort one of most significant carbon mitigation effort in the world today. While it is still too early to tell whether China will achieve this target, this paper attempts to understand the trend in energy intensity in China and to explore a variety of options toward meeting the 20% target using a detailed end-use energy model
Author Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Report (LBNL-757E); Lin, Jiang; Zhou, Nan; Levine, Mark; Fridley, David; 2007
Publisher
Link http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7v50g8mj
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

Global Carbon Emissions in the Coming Decades: The Case of China

Abstract China’s annual energy-related carbon emissions surpassed those of the United States in 2006, years ahead of published international and Chinese forecasts. Why were forecasts so greatly in error and what drove the rapid growth of China’s energy-related carbon emissions after 2001? The divergence between actual and forecasted carbon emissions underscores the rapid changes that have taken place in China’s energy system since 2001. In order to build a more robust understanding of China’s energy-related carbon emissions, this article reviews the role of economic restructuring, urbanization, coal dependence, international trade, and central government policies in driving emissions growth.
Author Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Report (LBNL-372E); Levine, Mark D.; Aden, Nathaniel T.; 2008
Publisher
Link http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1mz7w30c
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

The Contribution of the Commercial Transfer of Technology to Climate Change Mitigation: A Perspective on the Post-Kyoto Mechanisms of Technology Transfer

Abstract Case studies of commercial transfer of technologies in Chinese enterprises in the fields of energy efficiency and renewable energy, examine various ways to accelerate technology transfer through commercial mechanisms. This can be done through public and private sector funding and future global climate policy framework. This allows the establishment of new mechanisms for joint research and development, and encourages concerted efforts in GHG reduction and global climate agreements. This report offers recommendations for policy makers and other relevant experts.  Funded by the Heinrich Böll Foundation, this study is a joint venture with the Research Energy Institute of the National Development and Reform Commission, and the China Renewable Energy Association.
Author Heinrich Boll Stiftung, China; Main authors: Li Junfeng, Tanq Wenquian, and Ma Lingjuan; September 2009
Publisher
Link http://www.indiaenvironmentportal.org.in/files/TechTransfer_China_Boell.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

Climate Change and China: Technology, Market and Beyond

Abstract This occasional paper contributes to the international debate on climate change and the global search for climate justice. The critical UN Conference on Climate Change in Copenhagen in December 2009 will bring back the focus on the need for a climate governance regime. The complexities of the issues and the requirements of genuine and sustainable solutions are vast. The current financial crisis that is now affecting both developed and developing countries alike is putting additional difficulties in mobilizing political will to come up and implement strategic climate and energy policies that will answer climate, economic, social, energy and security challenges. This paper discusses the impacts of climate change to the environment of China and most especially to the livelihood of Chinese people there. It analyzed the Chinese government’s position and enumerates the measures that China has taken so far, as well as the commitments and concrete targets that it pledged to undertake. It explains China’s stance on the climate change negotiations; its arguments and considerations concerning its role to the international community; and its responsibilities to address its many domestic pressures in relation to geopolitics, the financial crisis, as well as global trade and technology issues.
Author Focus on Global South, Occasional Papers 6; Dale Jiajun Wen; February 2009
Publisher
Link http://focusweb.org/sites/www.focusweb.org/files/occ6.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

Climate Change and Food Security in China

Abstract Climate change has become one of the greatest challenges faced by the human race. It affects almost all aspects of our society, including food supply. Agriculture has long been the foundation of China’s social and economic development. With a large agricultural population and a huge pressure placed on resources, as well as a large production area that features complex topography and distinct patterns of climate, China’s farming industry is very vulnerable to climate change. Against this background, ecological agriculture therefore has its obvious advantages. It is of great importance for the sustainable development of agricultural and national security to determine the impact of climate change on agriculture and food security in the country, and to devise and implement appropriate measures to avoid these problems
Author Greenpeace China, Beijing, October 2008
Publisher
Link http://www.greenpeace.org/eastasia/Global/eastasia/publications/reports/climate-energy/2008/climate-change-and-food-security-in-china.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

Climate Change and Poverty

Abstract Greenpeace talks to rural villagers in Sichuan and Guangdong province about the impact of extreme weather on their lives.  Over 95% of China’s impoverished rural populations live in areas vulnerable to floods, droughts, and other severe weather events. Climate change will only increase the occurrence and severity of weather events, which will damage villages and destroy crops, making it even more difficult for people to climb out of poverty. It is a tragic truth that those most vulnerable to climate change are also the world’s most impoverished. and a short video can be found here http://www.greenpeace.org/eastasia/multimedia/videos/climate-energy/climate-change-poverty/
Author Greenpeace China, Beijing, June 2009
Publisher
Link http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/Global/usa/binaries/2009/6/poverty-and-climate-change.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

China, the United States, and the Climate Change Challenge

Abstract This report discusses the successes and challenges to effective regulation in China. It also addresses U.S. competitiveness concerns in relation to the introduction of U.S. cap-and-trade policies, and specific opportunities for enhanced climate change cooperation between the two countries
Author World Resources Institute; Deborah Seligsohn, Robert Heilmayr, Xiaomei Tan, Lutz Weischer; October 2009
Publisher
Link http://pdf.wri.org/china_united_states_climate_change_challenge.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

Scaling Up Low-Carbon Technology Deployment: Lessons from China

Abstract This report examines how low-carbon technologies have been introduced, adapted, deployed, and diffused in three greenhouse gas-intensive sectors in China: supercritical/ultrasupercritical (SC/USC) coal-fired power generation technology; onshore wind energy technology; and blast furnace top gas recovery turbine (TRT) technology in the steel sector.
Author World Resources Institute; Xiaomei Tan, Deborah Seligsohn, in collaboration with Zhang Xiliang, Huo Molin, Zhang Jihong, Yue Li, Letha Tawney, Rob Bradley; October 2010
Publisher
Link http://pdf.wri.org/scaling_up_low_carbon_technology_deployment.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

Carbon Efficiency, Carbon Reduction Potential, and Economic Development in the People’s Republic of China: A Total Factor Production Model

Abstract “Carbon intensity” is the traditional measure of an economy’s carbon performance. However, it is incapable of capturing the multidimensional features of an economy’s carbon performance, particularly when increased emissions have causes other than poor emitting technology, such as changes in the energy mix or the substitution of energy for labor. Hence, it can sometimes be a poor yardstick for comparing countries with different natural resources or factors of production. Introducing the concept of “carbon efficiency,” based on Data Envelopment Analysis, this study calculates the carbon performance in 2005 of 29 regions in the People’s Republic of China with results different from what the carbon intensity indicator would have suggested: Better carbon performance is associated with higher levels of economic development and greater resource endowments.
Author Asian Development Bank, June 2010
Publisher
Link http://www.adb.org/sites/default/files/pub/2010/carbon-efficiency-prc.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment

Environmentally Sustainable Development in the People’s Republic of China: Visions for the Future and the Role of the Asian Development Bank

Abstract The rapid pace of growth, the sectoral structure of the economy, the sources of energy used, and increased urbanization are four large-scale drivers behind the complex environmental agenda of the People’s Republic of China (PRC). To improve the quality of the ambient environment, the recently released Macro Strategic Research Report on the PRC’s Environment recognized the need for changing the momentum of the four driving forces, and included visions throughout 2050 for long-term environmentally sustainable development. Revisiting these visions for the future, this paper examines the key elements that the government needs to keep in mind in its efforts toward environmentally sustainable development, and articulates the role that the Asian Development Bank can play in contributing to the government’s environmental agenda in the next decade.
Author Asian Development Bank, December 2011
Publisher
Link http://www.adb.org/sites/default/files/pub/2011/environmentally-sustainable-development-prc.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.4 Climate Change and Environment