China top officials outline greener five year plan

Quality, not quantity was the watchword for Communist Party leaders as they set out a vision for sustainable growth this week

Beijing's air pollution has prompted action to reduce emissions by the Chinese government (Pic: J Aaron Farr/Flickr)

Beijing’s air pollution has prompted action to reduce emissions by the Chinese government (Pic: J Aaron Farr/Flickr)

By Liu Qin

China is likely to adopt tougher environmental targets in its 13th five year plan (FYP), based on a Communist Party plenum held this week.

Although the content will not be finalised until early next year, the outcomes of the plenum will set the direction for China’s economic and environmental policy making over the next five years.

The meeting, which was held in secret and ended on Thursday, discussed how to green the country’s growth.

Besides a stronger push to solve China’s environmental problems, the official report (Chinese language link) of the four-day meeting highlighted several areas that will be the main areas of focus during the next five years.

These include technological innovation, entrepreneurship, an abolition of the “one-child policy” and greater use of markets to allocate resources where they are most needed.

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The upcoming FYP, which will run from 2016 to 2020, is set to widen the range of pollutants to be controlled and sharpen enforcement of environmental laws, said Alvin Lin, China climate and energy policy director with the Natural Resources Defense Council.

“Now that we’re near the end of the 12th FYP, we can see that there were also some gaps, especially with regard to implementation of air and water standards, PM 2.5 air pollution, poor soil quality, and the continuing high consumption of coal,” Lin said.

According to commentators, the watchword among Chinese cadres is “quality” rather than “quantity”.

Pan Yue, vice minister of the MEP, said ahead of this week’s plenum that the 13th plan will see a strengthening of environmental laws, with costs imposed on polluting companies such that they will “neither dare nor be able” to break the law; a strengthening of environmental responsibilities for local government; and reform in the grants of planning permission for large projects.

He added that plan will aim to improve the quality of air, water and soil so that 2020 environmental quality is of the standard appropriate for “a moderately well-off” society.

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China will take a three-step approach to a greener, more modern economy, such as the reduction consumption of energy and resources; lowering emissions of pollutants and removing the link between pollution and economic growth, said Hu Angang, head of Tsinghua University’s School of Public Policy and Management. Hu has participated in the drafting FYPs since the early 2000s.

This strategy represents a clear change from the 12th FYP, which used quantitative caps on emission of pollutants as a tool to improve the environment. However, those caps have been met without any actual improvement in environmental quality, prompting strong criticism of the environment ministry and the appointment of an academic, Chen Jining, to head the ministry earlier this year.

Cao Mingde, a professor at the China University of Politics and Law, told chinadialogue that the biggest difference between the 12th and 13th FYP will be a fundamental change in how economic growth and environmental protection are balanced. “If this isn’t handled properly we won’t achieve the goal (of a greener society),” said Cao.

Since coming to power, president Xi Jinping has repeatedly stated the importance of environmental protection and further refined his idea of an “ecological civilization”, saying that environmental quality is key if that society is to be well-off.

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And while the economic slowdown is making it easier to reduce emissions of harmful pollutants and climate-changing gases, some fear that tailwinds battering the Chinese economy might also lead to slacker environmental targets.

The slowdown puts the government under more pressure to increase overall economic growth, maintain government income and provide jobs, said Wang Jinnan, deputy head and chief engineer at the Ministry of Environmental Protection’s Chinese Academy of Environmental Planning in an article (Chinese language only).

Economic pressure may curb environmental spending both by government and business, hampering efforts to clean up China’s chronic pollution.

Pan Yue said said the authorities are strongly aware of this problem, and will carry out in-depth research into how the slowdown will affect environmental protection.

One of the strongest signs that the 12th plan had delivered real environmental achievements was a fall in China’s CO2 pollution this year – the first time this century, said Hu Angang.

Chen Jining said earlier this month that China’s environment has benefitted from the changes brought in during the 12th FYP.

According to a report from the minister, from 2011 to 2014 emissions of the key pollutants ammonia, sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxides fell 9.8%, 12.9% and 8.6% respectively.

Further declines were also seen in the first half of this year, as overall targets for the 12th FYP were achieved and the size of the area affected by acid rain shrank to that last seen in the 1990s.

In 2014 emissions of five key heavy metal pollutants (lead, mercury, cadmium, chromium and arsenic) dropped by 20% from 2007 levels, and the number of cases of heavy metal pollution decreased from 10 a year in 2010 and 2011 to three a year between 2012 and 2014.

These successes were put down to the implantation of air and water pollution action plans: “These grand programmes for fighting pollution are unprecedented anywhere in the world,” said Chen.

This article first appeared in chinadialogue.

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