BEIJING, Sept. 12 (Xinhua) -- China's
National Development & Reform
Commission (NDRC) announced on June
30 a plan to raise consumer electricity
rates by 2.5 cents per kilowatt hour
(KWH). A tiny fraction of the additional
charge, 0.1 cent per KWH, will be
used to develop renewable energy (RE),
a senior NDRC official told Xinhua
a few weeks later.
This was unprecedented, the official
said. The money would be used to cover
the portion of RE development costs
that are higher than the average for
conventional energies. The practice
complies with the principle enshrined
in the Renewable Energy Law (REL)
that the extra costs of renewable
energies should be shared by all end
users of electricity across the country.
Earlier, on April 20, at the second
gathering of the State Energy Leading
Group (SELG), the highest authority
in China on energy issues, Premier
Wen Jiabao pointed out that renewable
energy was strategically important.
He urged all government departments
concerned to take effective measures
to accelerate the development of renewable
energies, so as to "lift the
share of quality, clean energies in
the total energy mix".
China's energy industry has made
impressive progress. Statistics show
the production of primary energy reached
2.06 billion tons of coal equivalent
last year. The figure marked a climb
of 238percent over the figures for
1978. At the end of 2005,the country's
total installed power generating capacity
exceeded 500 million KW.
In the past two decades, growth in
production supported a 5.16 percent
average annual growth in primary energy
consumption. However, GDP went up
even faster, at an annual average
of 9.6 percent. The result was a supply
shortage that short-circuited in 2004,
when 24 of the 32 provincial regions
suffered power cuts. Last year's coal
output, a record high and double the
2000 figure, was still not enough
to meet market demand. Meanwhile,
China's net imports of crude oil products
climbed to 143 million tons, up from76
million tons five years ago.
Domestic energy resources are limited.
In per capita terms, China is relatively
poor in many energy resources. Its
remaining exploitable reserves of
petroleum, natural gas and coal equal
merely 7.7 percent, 7.1percent and
58.6 percent of the world averages.
At the current speed of extraction,
experts say, the resources will last
just 15, 30 and 80 years, respectively.
The corresponding world averages are
45, 61 and 230 years.
The situation prompted the country's
economic planners to look for alternative
energy sources. Renewable energies
were high on the wish list. Water
power has a relatively long history
in China, where 40,000-plus small
hydropower facilities aggregate 34
million KW in capacity, the biggest
hydropower park in the world.
Given its grave energy security concerns,
China is stepping up efforts to develop
renewable energies. According to the
NDRC-prepared RE Medium- and Long-Term
Development Program, renewable energies
are expected to account for 16percent
of the country's total energy mix
by year 2020. Hydropower capacity
will reach 300 million KW, wind power
30 million KW, biomass energy 30 million
KW, and solar energy 1.8 million KW.
SELG members examined the Program
at the April gathering. After making
some modifications, it will be submitted
to the State Council for final approval,
a Xinhua report said in June.
China has three existing laws pertaining
to energy issues: the Electricity
Law, the Energy Conservation Law,
and the Renewable Energy Law. The
almost unanimous endorsement of the
REL by the National People's Congress,
the Chinese legislature, in February
2005, ahead of schedule, caught many
people by surprise. The law became
effective on 1 January 2006. A dozen
or so implementation methods that
accompany the law were made public
about a month later. Methods for managing
a special state fund for renewable
energies and measures for giving RE
projects discount loans and preferential
tax treatment are reportedly being
worked out.
Ma Kai, minister in charge of the
NDRC, said in July that a focal point
of government work for the period
2006-2010 was to enact an Energy Law
and revise the Energy Conservation
Law.
Relevant government departments vowed
to see through the new legislation
within two years. The Energy Law will
deal with basic and strategic energy
development issues in China. It will
rely on economic leverage to regulate
the energy sector, making sure that
extravagant users of energy pay a
higher price, and encourage the prospecting
and extraction of energy reserves
and the development of renewable and
new energies, said sources who were
closely involved in the drafting work.
Officials in local governments are
enthusiastic about promoting RE projects.
Their motives vary, though, from securing
a lucrative source of government tax
revenues, to building up a "green
government" image and gaining
plaudits for their personal work performance
records. So-called "Green GDP"
factors now have a considerable bearing
on the government assessment of an
official's job performance.
Companies, state-owned or private,
domestic or foreign, are also eager
to embrace RE projects, for reasons
similar to those mentioned above,
or out of a belief that the energy
sector is a gold mine -- if not "is",
surely "will be". And for
some companies, state-owned enterprises
in particular, the government's wishes
are another driver. On a number of
public occasions this year, NDRC deputy
minister Zhang Guobao said a certain
proportion of the products of big
energy developers would have to come
from renewable sources.
A major barrier that has prevented
renewable energies from developing
faster is the weakness China has shown
in independent technology development.
To date, most RE equipment or components
used in China for wind power, biomass
or solar energy, are imported, leading
to high costs.
The problem has been acknowledged.
The National Medium- and Long-Term
(2006-2020) Program Outline for Scientific
and Technological Development, released
by the government in February, designated
"energy" as the No. 1 area
that "needs urgent S&T support".
The document mapped out a host of
government-supported plans covering
key fields of study, cutting-edge
technologies, big special programs,
as well as basic research.
The push for renewable energies is
not entirely driven by energy concerns.
Environment factors are also critical.
China ratified the Kyoto Protocol
in May 1998. Although it was not obliged
by the pact to meet a specific emission
reduction quota, China is making efforts
to show that it is a responsible member
of the big global family. International
cooperation is necessary in addressing
problems such as dust storms because,
more often than not, the dust that
sweeps through Beijing a dozen times
each year comes from abroad, said
an official with the Beijing Meteorological
Bureau.
And China has a promise to keep with
the upcoming Olympic Games. In its
bid to host the event years ago, Beijing
pledged to stage a Green Olympics
which would be more environmentally
friendly than any previous Games.
The 2008 Beijing Olympic Games is
expected to recruit a diverse selection
of RE technologies. Its main venue,
the Olympic Green, is to have 20percent
of its power supplied by wind-sourced
electricity.
According to statistics, 38 billion
U.S. dollars were invested in RE development
worldwide in 2005. China topped the
list with a commitment of 6 billion
U.S. dollars, which did not include
its spending on large hydro projects.
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