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Archive for December, 2008

The Best of 2008

The Green Leap Forward looks back at 2008 and selects its “Top Five” stories.
Sort of.

A new year is upon us!  But what a year 2008 was!  Winter storms, the Sichuan earthquakes, the Beijing Olympics and the global financial crisis.  A common thread?  “Green,” says this China Daily article, which provides a pretty good summary of [...]

Green Hops: Autos, Nukes, Agro, Recycling Woes

Energy Price Reforms
NDRC announced that it would be removing price caps on coal from next year in a move towards a more market-driven price mechanism.  This move comes at an opportune time when coal prices have dropped by 30 to 40% since the summer, but GLF points out an earlier post (see finding #4) on [...]

Pacific Bridges: Steven Chu and John Holdren May Shape U.S.-China Energy Relations

GLF has been traveling and getting a little caught up on side projects, but let’s play some catchup.  Let’s pick things up with two specific appointments by President-elect Obama which have implications for U.S.-China energy relations–one being the 1997 Nobel Prize Laureate Dr. Steve Chu of Lawrence Berkeley Labs (LBL) as the new Secretary of [...]

More Petroleum Price Reforms: Move towards the Market and Higher Fuel Tax

The auto industry is front and center of the current financial-energy tsunami.  Detroit is in big trouble, and in need of a life-line.  Chinese automakers are faring better (and some have them tipped to be Detroit’s white knights), but the shakeout  in China has played itself out in petroleum price reforms.
On Friday (Dec 5), [...]

Give Coal a Bath

A reader of our recent Watergy post pointed out to me that in China, other than for making steel, coal used in China (including those used for power) is seldom washed clean of its ash content before combustion.  A recent op-ed in China Daily by Dr. Chuck Wells, Chief Technologist of OSIsoft, Inc., provides great [...]

Happy First Birthday!

It was 366 days ago (yes 2008 was a leap year, and what a Green Leap year it has been!) that this blog was born.  But as Cityweekend Beijing says in its green issue last week:
To call the green roundup on [The] Green Leap Forward ‘blogging’ is to ignore the depth and seriousness of Julian’s [...]

Green Hops: Poznan Preview, More Electric News, Green Capital

We’ve gone more than a month without a “Green Hops” update…what a crime!  We atone for that oversight here…
Climate Change and International Cooperation
A “high level” summit in Beijing on international technology transfer and climate change held on November 7 and 8 provided a preview of the international climate change negotiations that have kicked off in [...]


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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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