Climate policies in China:
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Transcript Climate policies in China:
Energy efficiency and urban infrastructure as
Chinese and Global challenges
Jun Li
[email protected]
‘Engaging China on Climate Change:
Crossroads of 21st-century Foreign Policy’
Brussels, 2 February 2011
Overview
• Ambitious target for energy efficiency improvement
in China’s 11th 5-year plan:20% reduction in GDP’s EI
(over 150 bn US$ invested)
• November 2009: 40-45% carbon/GDP intensity
reduction in 2020 relative to 2005
• “Low-carbon economy” has been adopted as a
national strategy in the 12th five-year plan(2011-2015)
• During the 12th FYP, Chinese government is likely to
impose binding targets on regions to achieve the 4045 objective
2
China 2050 LCE scenario
Energy efficiency
will be the largest
contributor to
carbon emissions
reduction in China
Source: CCICED 2009
3
Challenges in DCs: urban infrastructure
• Infrastructure development (buildings; transport;
energy; water supply and sewage etc.) contributes to
improving living condition ,quality of life and poverty
reduction in developing world
• Urban infrastructure is capital-intensive with strong
inertia and irreversibility; wrong decisions will result
in long term carbon lock-in.
• Lack of technical, financial and institutional capacities
in comprehensive governance of urban infrastructure
in most DCs
4
EE of urban infrastructure matter in China
1000000
China
Urban Pop (Thousands)
• Rapid urbanisation
(China’s urban
population and will
double during 20002030! )
• Income rise will drive
the demand for energy
services
• China’s 2009 stimulus
package (586 bn$),
nearly two thirds go to
infrastructure and
reconstruction
• Buildings and transport
are the most important
sectors for EE
improvements
800000
India
USA
600000
Western Europe
Russia
400000
200000
0
1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030
Large investment will need to be mobilised
Incremental cumulative cost for China in IEA 450 ppm
scenario: $ 2100 billion (2008 dollar) over 2010-2030; of
which half will be attributed to buildings and transport
5
1. Buildings : an extremely dynamic sector :
China builds a Japan in just 3 years
• More than 15 bn m2 will be built in the next 2 decades
• 60% of existing buildings today have been built since 1996
•60% of existing buildings in 2030 will be constructed after
2006
Source: Liu 2009; World Bank
6
Electricity demand in the buildings sector
increased rapidly
electricity demand growth 1990-2007
900
1990=100
800
Agriculture
700
600
Industry
500
Transport
400
300
Household+
commercial
200
100
0
1990
1995
Source: NBS 2008
2000
2004
2005
2007
7
An example of BEE in Beijing
• An apartment building with 160 households, total
floor area: 37 700 m2 ; with 60 mm EPS+double
glazed window
Efficiency standards
need to be updated
8
2. Transport: a daunting challenge
security of energy supply
-
Half of oil consumption in China relies on imports (80% by 2030)
-
Constant rise in oil price
-
Transport accounts for 1/3 of national oil consumption in China
Passenger vehicles could increase ten-fold in the next 25 years in China and
transport oil consumption is expected to quadruple in 2030 relative to 2005.
Air pollution: Emissions from motor vehicles have become the main source of air
pollution in China’s large- and medium-sized cities (Ministry of Environment, 2010)
GHG emissions in road transport in 2030 would increase 5 fold in the BAU to
exceed the total emission in EU by 2025. Urban transport bears a significant
share of the total transport energy use and GHG emissions.
Empirical studies show extremely high income elasticity of vehicle ownership and
fuel consumption in China (LR income elasticity is nearly 3!)
appropriate policy instruments are needed to tackle the challenge in energy
demand and emission control in urban transport sector
9
Fast growing car market
• China is now the biggest car market in the world
– 13.8m vehicles were sold in China in 2010
– 2010: China has 90 times more cars than in 1990
– 4m private cars in Beijing alone!
• CATs estimates a 6-fold increase in private car
ownership in cities by 2030
• Ambitious targets of electrical vehicles: 1 million
EC by 2020 (but total vehicle population in China
would then stand at 260 m according to Wang et
al.2008)
10
Main drivers of emissions in
Chinese cities
Source : World Bank 2009
11
Ways of reducing CO2 in urban transport
– Operational – improve fuel economy by reducing energy use
and emissions per vehicle km (vkm) driven
– Strategic or TDM – optimisation of urban transport, ITS,
reducing total vehicle km per passenger km (pkm) or per
tonne km (tkm), through smart organisation of urban
planning and transport infrastructure; land use-transport
planning coordination in favour of mass transit
– Multi-modal urban public transport: BRT; metro; NMT (e.g.
cycling, walking),
– Fuel switching : using alternative fuel ( CNG, biofuels, electric
or hybrid cars, hydrogen?…)
– Econ instruments: e.g. car license auction in Shanghai,
congestion charge in London&Singapore, carbon (fuel) tax…
– VCF for public transport (e.g. betterment tax in Hong Kong
MRT financing)
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3. Heating
• Heating area covers over 15 provinces; with 40%
of Chinese population
• Urban heating in northern China (130 Mtce per
year) accounts for one-fourth of building energy
consumption in the nation, responsible for a
significant proportion of GHGs and air pollutants
(e.g. SOx,NOx…) emissions
• Energy efficiency improvement in buildings and
DH contribute to energy security, air pollution
reduction and climate change mitigation
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Policy perspective
• Public policies to support local climate initiatives (5 provinces and
8 cities have been selected in the ‘low carbon city pilot
programme’ by the NDRC in 2010) and accelerate EE
technological progress and penetration in urban infrastructure
• Establish citywise energy efficiency indicators in urban
infrastructure and GHG emissions inventory to monitor the
energy efficiency improvement in transparent MRV manner
• Gradually remove unnecessary energy subsidies to encourage
investment in EE improvements , pricing reform and other fiscal
incentives…
• Introducing sectoral approach in BEE in buildings, transport and
DH sectors
• Enhance international (EU-China bilateral in particular)
cooperation and joint venture capital with advanced countries in
urban infrastructure decarbonisation R&DD
14