Archive for 8 Energy Intensive Industries

China’s Industrial Carbon Dioxide Emissions in Manufacturing Subsectors and in Selected Provinces

Abstract In 2009, China announced a goal to reduce its carbon dioxide intensity (CO2/unit of gross domestic product) by 40-45% by 2020 from the 2005 level. In 2011, China established a goal of reducing its CO2 intensity by 17% during the 12th Five-Year Plan period (2011-2015). Five provinces and eight cities have been selected to pilot low-carbon activities and are required to establish local-level emissions inventories. The industrial sector dominates the country’s energy-related CO2 emissions, using two thirds of the total energy consumption. A better understanding of China’s industrial energy use and CO2 emissions at the sub-sectoral and provincial levels can assist researchers and decision-makers in identifying the largest areas of energy-saving and emission-reduction potential. However, previous studies have largely focused on China’s energy use and CO2 emissions at an aggregated level. Based on publicly-available information, this paper estimates industrial energy-related CO2 emissions for each manufacturing sub-sector at the national level and in twelve provinces, including: Chongqing, Guangdong, Hebei, Henan, Jiangsu, Liaoning, Shaanxi, Shandong, Shanghai, Shanxi, Sichuan, and Xinjiang.This paper first explains data availability issues and discusses the methodology as well as conversion factors used for the CO2 emissions calculations. This paper then presents the results of the calculation of the carbon intensity of fuel and electricity for each manufacturing subsector and identifies the largest CO2-emitting sub-sectors in the selected provinces. In addition, three provinces are highlighted, illustrating that economic and energy structure play an important role in the industrial CO2 emissions within provinces. Finally, this paper discusses how to further improve carbon inventories at the sub-sectoral level and summarizes the findings of this study in light of China’s current domestic carbon inventory efforts.
Date 2012
Author Lu, Hongyou
Publisher Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Link http://china.lbl.gov/sites/all/files/lbl-5575e-industrial-co2-emissionsjune-2012.pdf
Series LBNL Report 5575E
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.2 General Status Reports, Evaluations and Recommendations

Shandong Province Energy Conservation Law

Abstract Adopted by the 28th session of the Standing Committee of the 8th People’s Congress of Zhejiang Province on June 6, 1997. The Regulations are developed in accordance with relevant laws and state regulations in a view to promoting social energy conservation, improving the efficiency of energy utilization, protecting the environment and implementing the strategy of sustainable development.

 

Author Standing Committee of the 8th People’s Congress of Zhejiang Province on June 6, 1997
Publisher
Link http://www.frankhaugwitz.info/doks/policy/1997_09_China_Shandong_Energy_Conservation_Law.pdf
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.1 Government Policy Documents

Shanghai Energy Conservation Law

Abstract Adopted by the 5th session of the Standing Committee of the 11th People’s Congress of Shanghai Municipality on September 22, 1998. The Regulations are formulated in accordance with the Law of Energy Conservation of the People’s Republic of China in a view to facilitating energy conservation in the whole society, improving energy efficiency, protecting environment and implementing sustainable development strategy on the basis of specific conditions of the Municipality.
Author Standing Committee of the 11th People’s Congress of Shanghai Municipality on September 22, 1998
Publisher
Link http://www.frankhaugwitz.info/doks/policy/1998_11_China_Shanghai_Energy_Conservation_Law.pdf
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.1 Government Policy Documents

Zhejing Province Energy Conservation Law

Abstract Adopted by the 9th session of the Standing Committee of the 9th People’s Congress of Zhejiang Province on December 15, 1998) This Regulation is enacted in accordance with the Energy Conservation Law of the People’s Republic of China, other relevant laws and regulations and provincial characteristics, in a view to the promotion of energy conservation in the whole society, improvement of energy efficiency, economic growth and environment protection
Author 9th session of the Standing Committee of the 9th People’s Congress of Zhejiang Province on December 15, 1998
Publisher
Link http://www.frankhaugwitz.info/doks/policy/1998_12_China_Zhejiang_Energy_Conservation_Law.pdf
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.1 Government Policy Documents

The Energy Conservation Law of the People’s Republic of China

Abstract The Energy Conservation Law of the People’s Republic of China which has been adopted at the 28th Meeting of the Standing Committee of the Eighth National People’s Congress on November 1, 1997 is promulgated now, and shall enter into force as of November 1, 1997.
Author 28th Meeting of the Standing Committee of the Eighth National People’s Congress on November 1, 1997
Publisher
Link http://www.frankhaugwitz.info/doks/policy/1997_11_01_China_Energy_Conservation_Law_EN.pdf
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.1 Government Policy Documents

Medium and Long-Term Energy Conservation Plan

Abstract Energy conservation is a long-term strategic guideline in China’s economic and social development, and an extremely urgent matter at present. The NDRC has therefore formulated the Plan of Energy Conservation, which aims to push the whole society towards energy conservation and energy intensity reduction, to remove energy bottlenecks, to build an energy saving society, and to promote a sustainable social and economic development and thus realize the grand objective of building a society that is well-off in every aspect. The programming period is divided into the Eleventh Five Years Plan period running to 2010 and the period from 2010 to 2020. The energy conservation objectives and the focus of development by 2010 are essentially planned, whereas the objectives stated for 2020 are proposed.
Date 2004 November
Author
Publisher National Reform and Development Commission (NRDC)
Link
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.1 Government Policy Documents

No Choice But to Fight: A Documentation of Chinese Battery Women Workers’ Struggle for Health and Dignity

Abstract A new book on Chinese workers’ rights, published by Globalization Monitor with an introduction by Agnes Jongerius, President of the Netherlands Trade Union Confederation FNV.“From exploited victims of globalisation to well-organised campaigners for compensation and safe working conditions, the journey of these employees at a multinational company is nothing short of inspiring. It takes the reader through China’s official complaints system, the Bureau of Letters and Calls, to disciplined picket lines that briefly brought production at a major global battery factory to a halt. It is a story of struggle, transformation and hope. Emerging from workshops thick with red clouds of poisonous cadmium oxide dust, come exhausted young women determined to change their fate and expose company disinformation on their deteriorating health. Despite official restrictions on organising and media access, these extraordinary workers demonstrate time and again the power of traditional trade union values: solidarity, determination and the importance of organised labour in protecting workers’ rights against a predatory system. At the end of the day, the Gold Peak workers’ story takes us back to basics. It is a timely reminder that ILO Conventions 87 and 98, on the rights to organise and to bargain collectively respectively, must be universally respected. I believe this book takes us a significant step closer to that goal.” – Agnes Jongerius.
Author Globalization Monitor, Hong Kong, 2008
Publisher
Link http://www.globalmon.org.hk/sites/default/files/attachment/gp_full_final.pdf
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.5.5 Electronics-Computers-Mobile Phones and Batteries

The Chinese Battery Industry: The Truth behind the Charge

Abstract Section I and II of this paper will provide a comprehensive overview of the battery industry. Firstly, background information will be provided on the major Chinese brands, as well as a synopsis of production methods and locations, for the various models of batteries in mainstream circulation. Secondly, industry standards of safety, including but not limited to, occupational disease, labor conditions, and workers’ rights will be critiqued, highlighting previous failures to protect workers in the industry, while introducing proposals to safe guard employees in the future. Thirdly, the environmental implications for the creation and disposal of batteries will be assessed, along with current regulations that have been proscribed by certain governments to combat potential threats that the battery industry poses to their respective populations. Fourthly, the future of the industry, specifically in lithium battery production, will be analyzed through different facets. Fifthly, the evolution of the manufacturers’ role in the increasingly global economy, will lend insight as to how companies can increasingly recognize workers’ rights and freedom of expression. Section III presents findings concerning the labor conditions of ten battery factories in Guangdong province. In nearly all of them, some forms of non-compliance with labor laws stipulations or outright infringement of the legitimate rights of employees were found. The conclusion will summarize the paper’s main findings while outlining proactive measures that are beneficial for workers and companies alike.
Author Globalization Monitor, June 2012
Publisher
Link http://www.globalmon.org.hk/sites/default/files/attachment/chinese%20battery%20industry-%20final.pdf
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.5.5 Electronics-Computers-Mobile Phones and Batteries

The High Cost of Calling; Critical Issues in the Mobile Phone Industry

Abstract In today’s globalised world of instant communication, mobile phones are a nearly ubiquitous feature of everyday life in most developed and many developing countries. Ninety percent of the population of Western Europe now has access to a mobile phone, and mobile phone penetration in large Asian countries like China and India is rising exponentially. In 2006, mobile phone sales will reach a volume of 935 million handsets, representing a value of US $136 billion. This SOMO report covers the industry’s top five manufacturers of mobile phones, Nokia, Motorola, Samsung, Sony-Ericsson and LG, comparing the companies’ corporate social responsibility (CSR) policy with the results of SOMO-commissioned field research into the actual conditions at mobile phone factories in China, India, Thailand and the Philippines.
Author SOMO, E. de Haan and J. Wilde Ramsing, November 2006
Publisher
Link http://somo.nl/publications-en/Publication_1516
Attachment
8 Energy Intensive Industries, 8.5.5 Electronics-Computers-Mobile Phones and Batteries

Mobile Phone Production in China: A Follow-up Report on Two Suppliers in Guangdong

Abstract In September 2008, makeITfair published a report entitled Silenced to Deliver: Mobile phone manufacturing in China and the Philippines, in which four Chinese factories in Guangdong were examined. Problems discovered included health and safety issues, excessive working hours, low wages and involuntary overtime. Workers were punished with wage deductions if they made mistakes, even when the mistakes were due to the unacceptable working conditions offered by the employer. As a follow-up to this report, workers and management at two of these factories, as well as their customers, were interviewed again during the fall of 2009. This follow-up is based on interviews with 64 workers at two factories producing chargers and transformers for four of the market leader mobile phone companies of the world: Nokia, Samsung, Motorola and LG Electronics. The interviews were conducted during the latter half of 2009 by people linked to universities in mainland China and Hong Kong. They possess earlier experience in factory surveys and are specialised in social work, migrant workers and labour issues. They were selected due to their earlier experience and their independence from government and particular enterprises.
Author SwedWatch & SOMO, E. de Haan, and S. Nordbrand, December 2009
Publisher
Link http://somo.nl/publications-en/Publication_3288
Attachment
8.5.5 Electronics-Computers-Mobile Phones and Batteries