The Green Leap Forward 绿跃进

 

Ready…set…jump!

Greetings all. Welcome to the kickoff of The Green Leap Forward, a blog dedicated to a greener China. As James Kynge observes in his award winning book–China Shakes the World–there exists in China a fundamental mismatch between “its frailty of its physical environment” on the one hand, and “the prodigious strength of its human capital” on the other hand, exerting an unsustainable toll over its natural resources. The consequences of such disequilibrium is familiar to anyone who has picked up a newspaper–nothing less than an ecological dystopia, as Elizabeth Economy starkly observes.

But awareness of the enormous environmental and energy challenges that China faces has reach the highest levels of the Chinese government. My hope for this blog is to track the latest developments of China’s attempts to green its path towards a “peaceful rise” in a cultural revolution that amounts to nothing less than a great Green Leap Forward, and hopefully inspire a broad audience both within China and without to think about what is clearly an enormous and grave situation not just for the Chinese, but for every citizen of the world. I would like to invite readers to post comments or questions.

For this blog’s maiden post, I would like to highlight the various measures and policies that China has enacted in recent months:

  • It released a 62-page national climate change policy that include measures to reduce energy intensity from 2005 levels by 20% in 2010 and increase forest coverage by 20% over the same period;
  • Small, inefficient coal mines have been closed and restrictions on new coal mines have been enacted;
  • Thermal power stations, smelters, cement plants and electrolytic aluminum producers seeking an IPO will have to meet tougher environmental requirements before a listing is approved;
  • The establishment of a “green credit policy,” under which bank loans for corporate polluters have been denied;
  • Foreign direct investment policies have been revised to encourage investments in clean energy and environmental technology companies while raising the hurdles for resource hungry of polluting industries;
  • Plans are in the works for Beijing to establish Asia’s first pollution credits exchange;
  • A proposed policy to promote environmental governance that was quashed a few years ago will be revived; the State Council has declared that the promotion prospects of provincial and municipal government leaders will be hindered if their respective jurisdictions fail to achieve certain energy conservation and emissions reduction targets
  • A database of information on the latest environmental technologies is being set up to help heavy industry comply with tough environmental standards.

This flurry of new policies have been catalyzed by the ever enlarging microscope that China finds itself under as it the rest of the world moves its manufacturing base to China and its trade surplus continues to grow at the expense of the U.S. and the E.U. , international concerns over climate change hit a tipping point, and the world prepares for China’s economic coming-of-age party at next year’s Beijing Olympics. Time will tell whether these policies are effective, and I get the feeling it will be sooner rather than later.

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One Response to “Ready…set…jump!”

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    Hong Kong may set up emissions trading market « The Green Leap Forward 绿跃进:

    [...] setting up a national (and perhaps pan-continental) pollution emissions exchange (see also earlier post).  These are promising indications of the increasing willingness in Asia to use market-oriented [...]

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What is the Green Leap Forward?

The Great Leap Forward was an economic and social plan used from 1958 to 1960 which aimed to use China's vast population to rapidly transform mainland China from a primarily agrarian economy dominated by peasant farmers into a modern, industrialized communist society. It is now widely seen, both within and outside of China, as an major economic (and environmental) disaster.

By contrast, the Green Leap Forward, is an emerging movement to harness and combine the powerful forces of smart policy, sustainable finance and green technologies to steer China's red-hot economy onto a more ecologically and socially sustainable path. Unlike its predecessor, the Green Leap Forward is as much a bottom-up revolution as it is a top-down one and in this age of increasing global interconnectedness, is a movement that will have an impact beyond its borders.

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