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Meanwhile, he was quick to tout China's own energy measures
-- much of them fueled in part by a desire to restructure the economy away from coal-intensive industries. Coal-fired power accounts for 70 percent of the country's energy, with China consuming 3 billions tons last year. China has pledged to slow the growth of its emissions, cutting carbon intensity
-- emissions per unit of GDP -- by 40 to 45 percent by 2020. Thousands of outdated and heavily polluting power plants have been shuttered in the past five years. Nationwide efforts have also been made to reach the goal of improving energy efficiency by 20 percent between 2005 to 2010
-- with well-publicized blackouts across factories, steel mills and even shopping areas and homes in recent months. China plowed $34.6 billion into investment and financing for clean energy in 2009
-- nearly double the $18.6 billion spent by the U.S. and about a quarter of the global total invested, according to a report by the Pew Charitable Trusts. It surpassed the U.S. last year as the biggest clean power market and is rapidly becoming a world leader in renewable energy sources, including solar, wind and hydropower, setting a national goal of using 15 percent alternative fuels by 2020. "They think that there's a clean energy industrial revolution happening and they want to be part of that," said Deborah Seligsohn, a senior adviser to the Washington, D.C.-based World Resources Institute. Swarming with uniformed workers, the $1 billion "near-zero emissions" GreenGen plant being built on the outskirts of Tianjin symbolizes China's huge ambitions in green technology as it plunges into the clean energy race worldwide. When the first phase goes into operation next year, the power plant will become China's first commercial-scale plant to turn coal into gas before burning it, making it easier to capture carbon emissions. Working round the clock in three shifts a day, seven days a week, workers are aiming to finish initial construction by the end of 2011. With a red hard hat perched on his head, deputy engineer Li Liangshi with the Huaneng Tianjin IGCC, gestured to the nearly built cooling tower behind him, saying, "This will be the future trend."
[Associated
Press;
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