China formally submitted its
climate pledge for the post-2020 period in preparation for the new
international climate agreement to be finalized this December in Paris. A
number of these details were announced as part of the US-China climate
agreement last November, but China has now added a carbon intensity
reduction target to its 2030 goals. China's climate commitment, and
action underway to cap coal consumption and continue to expand clean
energy, puts it on a path to cut more dangerous carbon pollution, and
earlier, than many previously expected.
This will bring enormous health,
environmental and economic benefits to the people of China, and help
the world stem the worst impacts of climate change. For its climate pledge, China proposed:
(1) a peak in carbon emissions by 2030 or earlier; (2) a continued
carbon intensity reduction target reaching 60-65% below 2005 levels by
2030; (3) an increase in non-fossil energy sources to represent at least
20 percent of total energy by 2030; and (4) a target to increase the
forest stock volume by around 4.5 billion cubic meters on the 2005
level. The carbon intensity reduction target is important for providing
an indication of the level at which China may peak its CO2 emissions.
China's CO2 peak will be earlier than many predicted
As
a part of the U.S.-China agreement, China's President Xi Jinping
committed to even deeper cuts in the country's climate pollution than
many expected was achievable just a few short years ago. In fact, prior
to the announcement many experts predicted that China's emissions would
not peak for several more decades. The International Energy Agency's
reference scenario, for example, projected that China's CO2 emissions
wouldn't peak until well after 2040, and other estimates followed a
similar trend (see figure). Now China has promised to peak its carbon
emissions within 15 years, and to make its best efforts to peak before
then.
New carbon intensity target and a national coal cap policy should lead to a lower and earlier peak
This
new carbon intensity reduction target of 60-65% below 2005 levels by
2030 could lead to emissions significantly lower than previous
estimates. And under a national coal cap policy that is under serious
discussion in China - to cap coal consumption at 4.2 billion tons or
less by 2020 - CO2 emissions in China could potentially peak by 2025 at an even lower level than the CO2 intensity target might imply. According to two new studies
by the National Center for Climate Change Strategy and International
Cooperation (NCSC) - one of China's most important think tanks -
released on June 10th as part of the China Coal Cap Project coordinated by NRDC, China's CO2
emissions could peak by 2025 if it enacts a strong national coal cap
policy that controls coal consumption to four billion tons by 2020 and
3.5 billion tons by 2030 (see figure). This is a similar finding to a recent study from researchers at the London School of Economics
which looked at some of the structural changes occurring in the country
and found that emissions could peak by 2025 or sooner. These overall
numbers could be even lower if China's GDP doesn't grow as fast as
projected as a number of independent analysts estimate a potential lower
GDP growth rate.
This earlier and lower coal consumption peak and CO2
peak are quite possible, as addressing China's overuse of coal has
become a key focus for the government as part of its efforts to address
China's severe air pollution. Coal consumption accounts for 50-60 percent of China's PM2.5 pollution nationwide,
and the government has already enacted regional coal consumption caps
for the key air pollution regions. Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei and Shandong,
some of the largest coal-consuming provinces, have announced targets to
reduce their coal consumption by a total of 83 million tons by 2017
compared to 2012 levels. Shanghai, Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Guangdong (for
its industrial Pearl River Delta) will announce their 2017 coal
reduction targets by the end of June. And the State Council - China's
cabinet - has already established
a national coal consumption cap target of 4.2 billion tons for 2020 in
the Energy Development Strategy Action Plan released last November.
Already coal consumption is showing credible signs of reaching its peak.China's
coal consumption fell by 2.9 percent in 2014, the first drop in 14
years, according to official Chinese energy statistics. This occurred
even as China's GDP grew by 7.4 percent. And the first quarter of 2015
saw a similar declining trend in coal consumption.
China's new climate targets should help it to peak its CO2
emissions earlier and lower than previous estimates, speed its
transition to clean energy, and help secure a strong international
agreement this year.
http://www.theenergycollective.com/jakeschmidt/2245235/chinas-new-2030-climate-target-will-contribute-lower-and-earlier-emissions-peak-