Tag Archives: economy
China Has A Lot to Do to Realize Carbon Trading Nationwide
2013-07-01 14:29:48 CRIENGLISH.com Web Editor: Xu Fei A high-level meeting on the 6th World Economic and Environmental Conference was held in Beijing on Sunday, June 30, 2013. The roundtable meeting discloses that the 6th World Economic and Environmental Conference will be held in the latter half of this year under the theme “on the way to green and low carbon to deepen industrial reform and seek harmonious development.” [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com] The city of Shenzhen, in south China’s Guangdong Province, has launched a carbon trading scheme, to become China’s first market for compulsory carbon trading. Energy consumption and environmental experts are praising the move as a positive sign that the government is changing its ways and reducing carbon dioxide emissions. However, they also point out that the government still has a lot to do to realize carbon trading nationwide. The Shenzhen pilot scheme involves 635 local companies which account for 26 percent of the city’s gross domestic product and 38 percent of its CO2 emissions, or about 30 million tonnes — a tiny amount compared to the 8 billion tonnes China emitted in 2012. Liu Yanhua, Counselor of the State Council and Former Chinese Vice Minister of Science and Technology, says production enterprises, a major contributor to such emissions, are expected to play an active role should China develop its low-carbon technology, by applying this carbon trading pilot scheme across the nation. “70 percent of China’s energy consumption derives from production enterprises, which is an important factor in world energy-related CO2 emissions. And the remaining 30 percent of energy use and emissions takes place in homes. Developing countries usually find the reverse situation. If China wants low-carbon development, the nation needs to transform its model of development. Enterprises would undoubtedly play a big role in the transformation as a result of 70 percent of emissions being caused by the production.” Carbon markets allow companies to buy permits to emit carbon dioxide from those that burn less fossil fuels. They thus help set a price on emissions, a mechanism that aims to encourage companies to reduce such pollution and invest in cleaner technologies. Shenzhen is one of the seven cities that were designated as a pilot area for carbon emission trading together with Tianjin, Shanghai, Chongqing and Beijing municipalities and the provinces of Guangdong and Hubei. Rights for 100 million tons of carbon emission have been allocated to 635 enterprises over the past three years, based on their previous emission and added industrial values. Zhou Jian, an expert with Tsinghua University’s Institute of Energy, Environment and Economy, believes that this pioneering pursuit of carbon trading development in Shenzhen indicates government progress in reducing emissions. “Shenzhen is the country’s first market for the compulsory carbon trading of seven pilot cities and provinces. This fact also demonstrates a change in the Chinese government’s attitude in energy conservation and emissions’ reduction, from the heavy reliance on compulsory and administrative means to adopt market mechanisms.” China’s carbon-trading plans are modeled on similar programs now underway in Europe, Australia, California, New England and other large economies. Zhou Jian believes that the advanced European and US markets would first make a law that stipulate the cap for carbon emissions and then allocate a quota of emissions to individual enterprises, however the Chinese government has failed to put such a law in place yet. Zhou also added another problem has to be addressed in realizing carbon trading nationwide. “One of the difficulties lies in the establishment of a control system to calculate, monitor and examine carbon emissions in China. If the quota of carbon emissions is allocated to each individual enterprise, the basic and micro-statistics regarding their respective consumption of carbon and related emissions are strictly necessary. But there is no such content in China’s current accounting system.” There are also concerns in China about what will happen to the price of credits when companies start to trade them. Some say that the price of these credits will rise as China looks to cut pollution levels, which may spark speculative trading. Continue reading
DOE Announces Investment In 4 Advanced Biofuel Projects
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Market Turmoil Forces G8 Leaders To Focus On Global Economy
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/97cbce80-d4ee-11e2-9302-00144feab7de.html#ixzz2X2HHQztS By Chris Giles in London, Robin Harding in Washington and Ben McLannahan in Tokyo Turmoil in financial markets is once again overshadowing a Group of Eight summit, turning world leaders’ attention away from trade, tax and transparency and back to the bumps on the road to recovery. With global bond markets swooning on the hint that the US might slow its money-printing operations and currency market volatility leaping as investors try to gauge the right level of the dollar and the yen, G8 leaders know the world economy remains a dangerous place. None of this was in Britain’s scripts for the summit. Only a month earlier, when the finance ministers and central bank governors of the Group of Seven met just outside London, George Osborne welcomed the breathing space financial markets were offering. “We are meeting at a time when financial market sentiment has improved and there are signs this is feeding through to an improved outlook in some of our economies,” the British chancellor said after the G7 meeting. Britain’s expectation of a relaxed chat about Abenomics, the name given to Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe’s three-pronged approach to reviving his country’s economy, alongside the perennial pressure on Germany to boost its domestic demand will now have a sharper edge. But the actor who has done most to influence the global economy in the past few weeks, Ben Bernanke, chairman of the US Federal Reserve, will not even be at the G8 and will not speak until the day after it finishes. The Fed winds up its two-day meeting on Wednesday. Mr Bernanke will be at the centre of G8 discussions because it was his comment last month that the Fed might start to slow its third round of quantitative easing at one of its next few meetings that sent markets down. Next week is unlikely to be that meeting, given some continued weakness in the data, and uncertainty about the effects of tighter US fiscal policy. But bond investors have taken the words as a sign that the peak of bond prices had passed and the smart money should exit. Instead, Mr Bernanke is likely to sharpen the signal about when the Fed will taper QE3, while repeating as loudly as he can that it all depends on the economic data and there is a big difference between easing at a slower pace and actually tightening monetary policy. The simple reality for most Fed officials is that the economic outlook looks better now that it did when the Fed began QE3 last September. The unemployment rate has come down from 8.1 per cent to 7.6 per cent. Given that, it cannot make sense to keep easing monetary policy at the same pace forever, and Mr Bernanke’s “next few meetings” remark reflected that. To the extent that recent turmoil knocks a bit of froth out of global markets, the Fed will regard it as no bad thing. If G8 leaders are missing one key figure in the global economy, the other is in the room, Mr Abe, whose “Abenomics” has pushed a rapid recovery in the world’s third-largest economy, but with continued long-term fears for its sustainability. Mr Abe will come to Lough Erne with a simple argument. The 15 years of deflation Japan has experienced, more or less without interruption, were extraordinary, so they demanded an extraordinary policy response. G8 summit Read our coverage of the gathering as leaders debate tax, trade, the global economy and foreign policy So far, trading partners have fixated on the yen, still the world’s worst-performing currency over the past six months even after its rapid rise over the past week. But a lower yen is a side-effect of a concerted effort to rouse the world’s third-largest economy from slumber, the prime minister will say. What is good for Japan is good, for everybody else. Unofficially, the Japanese argument is even simpler, however. The yen acted as the world’s shock absorber for the four years after the Lehman crisis, Japan thinks. Even now, amid a fresh round of fears over global growth, it is still about 5 per cent stronger than its 10-year average against the US dollar. So, leaving aside all the talk of trade wars and stealing growth from neighbours, isn’t it time Japan caught a break? Germany and the US are wary about this conclusion and will be relieved by the yen’s recent bounce back as they tolerated but did not welcome the yen’s depreciation since the start of Abenomics. But the key question for Japan is whether the boost to growth is anything more than temporary. Here, Mr Abe will try to spell out the guiding principles behind the “third arrow” of structural reforms, that was approved by the cabinet on Friday. Arrows one and two – fiscal and monetary stimulus – were easy to implement and quick to take effect. The third will not be. Continue reading