guardian.co.uk,
Jonathan Watts, Friday 18 November 2011
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If China phases out energy-intensive technology it can great millions of jobs, a report says. Photograph: Frederic J. Brown/AFP |
China can
make a net gain of 9.5m jobs over the next five years if it phases out its
dirtiest, energy intensive industries and replaces them with renewable
technology and other "green" businesses, according to an influential
advisory body.
The
potential for green growth was flagged up in a report that highlights the
"Jeckyl and Hyde" nature of the environmental situation in China,
which can claim both the world's biggest investment in new energy and the most
dangerous levels of pollution. The report was released this week by the China Council of International Co-operation on Environment and Development, which is
headed by Li Keqiang – widely tipped to become the next prime minister – and
includes 200 domestic and overseas experts and leading figures in the United
Nations and other world bodies.
On the
economics of a shift to a more sustainable development path, it is brimful of
ambition and optimism. The council advises the government to spend 5.8 trillion
yuan (£61bn) on measures to save energy, protect the environment and replace
polluting industries with hi-tech firms. It estimates this would create 10.6m
jobs, boost GDP by 8 trillion yuan and result in energy savings worth another
1.4 trillion yuan. These gains, it says, would far exceed the costs of
eliminating the dirtier sectors of the economy, which are calculated as a loss
of 950,000 jobs and 100bn yuan in output.
At their
annual meeting, the council emphasised the need to shift track – a process that
the government has tried to promote in its latest five-year plan. "The
industrial sector is still the prime energy consumer and a major cause of
pollution, so greening the sector is key for China's green
transformation," Li Ganjie, vice minister of environmental protection and
the council's secretary general was quoted as saying by the China Daily.
On the
environmental situation, however, the report painted a far bleaker picture for
the next 10 years of worsening levels of toxic waste, ecological degradation
and water shortages. At the release of the report, Achim Steiner, executive
director of the UN Environment Programme, praised China's $49bn (£31bn)
investment last year in renewable energy, but said the country is also paying
an alarming health cost for the past three decades of dirty growth. "They
are paying a price first of all individually by premature deaths ...
Respiratory diseases and premature deaths in the hundreds of thousands," he
said.
The report
- which was three years in the making - placed much of the blame on an
obsession with GDP expansion, particularly at a local government level, which
has resulted in lax implementation of environmental goals. "The blind
pursuit of economic growth has now become a huge obstacle for China's green
growth," it says.
It suggests
the introduction of a carbon tax and new pricing mechanisms that would
encourage more efficient use of scarce resources such as water. The central
government says it is also trying to rebalance environmental quality with
economic quantity, partly by setting new goals to reduce pollution.
In the
latest promise of improvement, the Ministry of Environmental Protection said it will tighten air quality monitoring and include PM2.5 small particulate matter in the index for the first time. Zhou Shengxian, the environment minister, told
the council that China would move towards international standards of
monitoring, but warned that there was still a long way to go. "It will be
a gradual process, and won't be achieved all at once," Zhou said while
outside Beijing was shrouded in a thick haze.
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