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friends of the earth international media
briefing
7 november 2005
china’s future energy needs
The Chinese Government is hosting a major
international conference on renewable energy
in Beijing on 7 and 8 November, supported by
the German Government as part of an
international commitment to drive forward
renewable energy. The conference comes as
global attention is focused on energy demand
and the urgent need to tackle climate change,
with new figures out today (Monday 7th
November) which predict that global emissions
look set to rise by 52 per cent by 2030
[1].
Later this month, ministers will meet in
Montreal to discuss international action to
tackle climate change. China’s growing
economy is fuelling huge demand for energy –
making the need for clean sustainable
solutions even more urgent.
The conference, which follows an
international process agreed at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg in 2002, will address the global
expansion of renewable energies and how
technology can be successfully shared and
transferred. UN member states, with
international organisations, non-governmental
organisations and the private sector will
attend.
Two billion people currently have no access
to modern energy services. Friends of the
Earth believes that introducing clean and
affordable renewable energy services can help
alleviate poverty, reduce regional and local
air and water pollution, generate jobs and
income, empower local communities and promote
gender equity.
Friends of the Earth International Climate
Campaigner Catherine Pearce said:
“The predicted growth in carbon emissions
shows the urgent need for countries to switch
to clean sustainable energy supplies. Rich
developed countries must lead the way by
taking action at home, but also by helping to
finance low carbon technologies in the
developing world. Countries like China will
clearly continue to develop rapidly, but we
do not have to compromise development in
cutting emissions.
Chinese Energy Demand "
China’s projected emissions in 2025 will
reach 3 billion tons of carbon, overtaking
the US as the world’s biggest emitter at just
under 2.7 billion tones of carbon. Coal is
abundant and cheap in China. With the world’s
third largest deposits, China leads in its
production and consumption, mining 1.8bn tons
in 2004. The International Energy Agency has
said that China and other developing
countries will become the world’s greatest
polluters by 2030.
Moves to clean energy in China
China announced earlier this year that it
had passed a renewable energy law to increase
production of energy from sustainable
sources. The law, which will come into force
early next year, seeks to increase the usage
of solar and wind power to 10 per cent of
China's total consumption by 2010. This would
equate to around 60 gigawatts. The target was
introduced due to rising oil prices and
concerns over rising emissions.
The EU China Summit in September announced
two major areas in a continuing
partnership:
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To develop and demonstrate in China and
the EU by 2020, advanced “zero-emissions”
coal technology. This technology will allow
for the capture of CO2 emissions from
coal-fired power plants and its subsequent
storage underground, for example in
exploited oil or gas fields or in sealed
geological strata, thereby avoiding CO2
emissions into the atmosphere.
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Support EU and Chinese efforts to
reduce the energy intensity of their
economies. China has set the goal of
halving the energy intensity of the Chinese
economy by 2020. In the recently adopted
Green Paper on energy efficiency, the
European Commission has proposed to reduce
the EU’s energy consumption by 20% over the
same period by increasing energy
efficiency.
China also attended the G8 summit in
Gleneagles in July and produced a joint
declaration with Brazil, India, South Africa
and Mexico. The declaration set out their
concern that climate change has and will
continue to have a profound impact on
development prospects of their societies.
The declaration called for the developed
world to act first and take the lead in
international action on climate change and to
provide additional financing and transfer of
cleaner, low-emission and cost-effective
technologies to developing countries. They
proposed a new paradigm shift to ensure that
technologies with a positive impact on
climate change are both accessible and
affordable to developing countries and will
require a concerted effort to address
questions related to intellectual property
rights.
What is needed:
Friends of the Earth is urging governments
and other key constituencies to overcome the
obsolete fossil-based energy system and adopt
clear, strong polices towards renewable
energy and energy efficiency.
Friends of the Earth's International Climate
Campaigner Catherine Pearce said:
"Developing renewable energies such as
biomass, wind, tidal, solar and photovoltaics
will have wide-ranging benefits for the
entire global community. They can contribute
to security of energy supply, reduce fuel
imports and dependency, cut greenhouse gas
emissions and improve environmental
protection. It's time politicians and
decision-makers across the world embraced
these technologies for the benefit of us all.
"
"Clean technologies and renewables must be
deployed as soon as possible. If the world is
locked into a carbon-intensive development
path, the impacts will fall most heavily on
communities in fossil fuel producing regions
and those most vulnerable to climate change.
Resources and money, particularly public
funds, must be channelled away from dirty,
inefficient fossil-fuels and towards the
clean, green energy of tomorrow".
Notes:
[1] International Energy Agency, World
Energy Outlook 2005
See:
http://www.iea.org/Textbase/press/pressdetail.asp?PRESS_REL_ID=163
Contact: Catherine Pearce Tel: + 44 (0)20
7566 1723 Mobile: + 44 (0)7811 283641
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