China
needs CO2 cap to meet climate pledges: legislator
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[March 12, 2015] BEIJING
(Reuters) - China needs to impose a nationwide carbon cap if it is to
fulfill a pledge made last year to bring emissions to a peak by around
2030, a legislator said in a proposal submitted to parliament this week.
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Wang Yi, a member of the China Academy of Sciences and adviser to
China's climate negotiation team, said the country should include an
absolute CO2 cap of around 10 billion tonnes for 2020 in its
five-year plan covering the 2016-2020 period.
China has not published official carbon emissions data but
researchers at Tsinghua University estimated the total reached 7.25
billion tonnes in 2010.
"A target to control overall CO2 emissions should be a mandatory
target in the 13th five-year plan, to be broken down according to
variations in regional and industrial development,” Wang said in the
proposal, sent to Reuters by email on Thursday.
Wang's proposal is based on academic studies into how China can meet
a promise to bring emissions to a peak by around 2030, made in a
joint statement with the United States last November.
"The studies show that it is very likely that energy-related CO2
emissions will peak around 2030 at 11-12 billion tonnes, and will be
in the range of 9.5-10.5 billion tonnes by 2020," Wang wrote.
Last week, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang vowed to put a ceiling on coal
use and to cut carbon intensity - the amount of CO2 emissions per
unit of growth - by at least 3.1 percent this year.
"We will actively respond to climate change and expand the trials
for trading carbon emissions rights," the premier said.
China aims to keep coal consumption below 4.2 billion tonnes in
2020, according to a government action plan published last year. If
the target becomes legally binding, it will be the first time China
has capped coal use.
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China has established seven regional carbon trading exchanges and
aims to create a nationwide scheme by 2016. A mandatory cap on
emissions will help determine how big the national market will be.
Anything less than a tough and legally enforceable cap is likely to
lead to a permit oversupply. Regulators are already wary of
repeating mistakes made by Europe's Emissions Trading Scheme, now in
the doldrums as a result of a slowdown that has created a 2.1
billion tonne carbon credit surplus.
China is likely to regulate 3-4 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide by
2020 and the market could be worth up to 400 billion yuan ($72
billion), a government official disclosed in September. That would
be twice the size of the European Union's market, currently the
world's biggest.
(Reporting by Kathy Chen and David Stanway; Editing by Alan
Raybould)
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