Tag Archives: manufacturing
China Takes Cautious Step Toward Carbon Emissions Trading
http://s1.reutersmed…r=CBRE95H0GNH00 By David Stanway BEIJING | Tue Jun 18, 2013 1:59am EDT (Reuters) – China launched its first pilot carbon emissions exchange on Tuesday, though plans for a nationwide rollout and efforts to apply the scheme to some polluting heavy industries could be undermined by a slowdown in the world’s No.2 economy . High-emission industries such as aluminum and steel are likely to resist higher costs as they are already battling weak prices due to tepid demand and a persistent supply gut. “It is a very big concern for Beijing and for local governments – how to strike a balance between controlling emissions and maintaining economic growth especially amid a general slowdown in the economy ,” said Shawn He, lawyer and carbon specialist at the Hualian legal practice in Beijing. While the exchange in the southern city of Shenzhen will not immediately lead to a big cut in China’s emissions of climate-changing greenhouse gas , now the world’s highest, it does still represent a statement of intent by Beijing, campaigners said. “This is just a baby step when you look at the total quantity of emissions, but it enables China to establish institutions for carbon controls for the first time,” said Li Yan, head of environmental group Greenpeace’s climate and energy campaign in China. Under such a cap-and-trade scheme, companies must buy allowances from others if they want to exceed carbon limits. But there is still a long way to go in China, and the design of its pilot platforms – as well as the national scheme that would eventually replace them – face economic and social pressures. “Of course, decision makers have to look at the social impact – the carbon market cannot be designed in an idealistic way and you have to make sure the design of the mechanism will address such issues as social stability,” said Wu Changhua, China director with the London-based Climate Group consultancy. And the example of carbon markets overseas is not encouraging, with the global financial crisis saddling Europe’s Emissions Trading Scheme with a crushing oversupply of carbon credits and record low prices. The Shenzhen exchange is one of seven pilot schemes due to be launched this year or next, and will involve 635 local industrial enterprises accounting for more than a quarter of local GDP and more than 30 million metric tons (33.07 million tons) of CO2 emissions. But that is still a drop in the ocean compared to the country’s total emissions of around 8 billion metric tons last year Other platforms due to start in 2013 include one in the business hub of Shanghai, where leading steel mill Baoshan Iron and Steel will participate, and Hubei province, home of Wuhan Iron and Steel. INDUSTRIAL IMPACT While giant oil firms like CNOOC and PetroChina will take part in the Shenzhen scheme, few of the companies involved will be from bloated but carbon-intensive heavy industrial sectors such as steel or aluminum , and figuring out how to include them is likely to be a bigger challenge. Late last year, China’s industry ministry told firms in sectors like steel to reduce their 2010 carbon intensity rates – the volume of CO2 produced per unit of output – by 18 percent by 2015. That was a massive burden for a sector already bruised by rising input costs and minimal returns, with the country’s economy growing at its slowest pace for 13 years in 2012 and data so far this year surprising on the downside. But while it will add to the costs of struggling firms, it could also give Beijing another tool to bring wayward industries in line with state policies and force polluting firms to close. Carbon trade will give local governments an alternative source of revenue as well as an incentive to free up some of their CO2 allocations by closing small steel mills. Jiang Feitao, a researcher at the China Academy of Social Sciences who has studied the impact of environmental policy on the steel sector, said smaller companies would be hit hardest by costs. NATIONAL TRADE After Shenzhen, Shanghai and Hubei, four more pilot exchanges are due to open in the capital Beijing, the sprawling industrial municipalities of Tianjin and Chongqing, and the manufacturing center of Guangdong province on the southeast coast, probably next year. The National Development and Reform Commission said the seven pilot schemes will begin a process of integration in 2015 and that a nationwide platform will go into operation some time before 2020. But the seven regions were given considerable leeway to design their own schemes and it remains unclear how they will connect together. “My guess at this moment is that they will set up a national platform and gradually integrate the seven pilot schemes into that one, but we don’t know the architecture yet – this is very new,” said Climate Group’s Wu. He, the lawyer, said China still needed legislation to give legal recognition to the concept of carbon trading. It also needed to solve the longstanding problem of measuring emissions. “I don’t think it is possible to get to a national market by 2015 – there are many technical issues to be addressed to integrate these islands into one continent,” He said. China also eventually needs to set a national limit on emissions and allocate this to individual industries and provinces to establish a full countrywide trading scheme. “Realistically, we are looking at 2025 before we have a cap – a few years ago some were saying 2040 or 2035 so we have already made progress,” said Wu. “Growth will continue to be the No.1 priority. Cap-and-trade will be one of the ways of trying to grow differently, but China is still a developing country and we have to grow.” (Editing by Joseph Radford) Continue reading
Here comes the ultra fuel-efficient car
Here comes the ultra fuel-efficient car Olivia Olarte-Ulherr (olivia@khaleejtimes.com) / 11 June 2013 Despite the lack of industrial facility in the region, engineering students at the Higher Colleges of Technology’s Ruwais Colleges, have finally completed their first ultra fuel-efficient ‘Made in the UAE’ car. The 17-member team is now ready to compete at the Shell Eco-marathon Asia 2013 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in July. According to team leader Abdulazeez Al Mehairi, graduating student of higher diploma in megatronic engineering at Ruwais Colleges, construction of the car took three months and was not without its challenges. “The first challenge was to build a very dynamic system that would enable us to consume less fuel (without affecting) the speed,” he told Khaleej Times. The material is also a challenge as Ruwais does not have the facility to supply their manufacturing needs. “We have to go to Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Sharjah,” Abdulazeez explained. Shell Eco-marathon is one of the world’s most innovative and challenging student competitions held annually in the Americas, Europe and Asia. Participants to the challenge have worked together to find solutions in making transportation more efficient while reducing its environmental impact. The marathon has long sparked debates about the future of mobility and inspired young engineers to push the boundaries of fuel-efficiency in vehicles. “The Shell Eco-marathon challenge has created a unique opportunity for our students … to apply their engineering and project management skills to a real-time project with global implications,” said HCT Vice Chancellor Dr Tayeb Kamali. “We feel honoured to be part of the group that will be representing the UAE at Shell’s 2013 Eco-marathon challenge in Kuala Lumpur. As a team we have achieved so much through this process that we feel like winners already,” said Abdulazeez. “Through this experience, we have gained project management skills and have tapped into our creative side to design and construct our fuel-efficient car. We have successfully raised awareness about the campaign and received support from both our university and local communities who we hope to make proud this July,” he added. For the competition, the team needed Dh250,000 which will be used not only for the car construction, but to ship the car to Malaysia, as well as, ticket and hotel of the entire team. “We got $10,000 as support from Shell and sponsorship from Borouge and the Emirates Nuclear Energy Corporation (ENEC),” Abdulazeez said. The Ruwais team’s ultra fuel-efficient car will be put on display at various locations in the Western Region during the first two weeks of June, prior to flying it out to Malaysia for the competition. The HCT Ruwais Colleges will join six other teams from the UAE and a number of teams from the region including Egypt, Lebanon and Qatar to compete in Malaysia from July 4 to 7. Continue reading
Economy to benefit as Enoc and Eppco cut diesel prices
Economy to benefit as Enoc and Eppco cut diesel prices Amanda Fisher / 2 June 2013 Dubai’s transport sector is in line for a boon with expectations savings could be passed on to consumers, after the emirate’s petrol stations announced a 20 fil reduction per litre of diesel — though costs in other parts of the country remain much lower. Emirates National Oil Company announced the price of diesel at its more than 100 Enoc and Eppco petrol stations would drop from Dh3.7 a litre to Dh3.5, effective from Saturday. An Al Khail Road pump showing the revised price. KT photo by Rahul Gajjar The prices of both petrol and diesel in the country are heavily subsidised, with diesel in Abu Dhabi and Al Ain Adnoc petrol stations retailing for Dh2.35 a litre. Prices were at a record Dh4.56 per litre in 2008, during a volatile period when diesel prices fluctuated heavily. However, the price has been climbing steadily with little respite ever since, with transport companies such as Dubai-based Euro Movers International feeling the pinch, according to director Khurram Abdulla. “The last five years the fuel costs have been going up, so any reduction is obviously very welcome, so it will have a positive impact on our bottom line.” Abdulla said his company spent about half-a-million dirhams each year on fuel for their local and international transport companies, which relied on seven vans and trucks using diesel. “I think this is the first time it’s actualy coming down. Normally we’re used to it just going up.” He said he was optimistic the price reduction would remain in place for some time, in which case the company could look to pass on savings to customers. “It’s very competitive (in) our industry and Dubai in general is very competitive, so whatever we can do to make ourselves more competitive (we will). We’ll definitely pass that on…We’ll wait for a month to see how much we can pass on…we might be able at the end of the month to see a reduction of five per cent,” Abdulla said after doing a few calculations based on the new lowered price. While fuel costs only amounted to about 10 per cent of the company’s overall costs, Abdulla said the company would hope to see secondary savings in their international arm, if shipping companies they contracted also passed the savings from the lowered international price of diesel. Enoc retail managing director Burhan Al Hashemi said Enoc had revised the price of diesel in line with the international price trends for crude and refined products. “The recent decline in international prices has provided us an ideal window of opportunity to pass on the price benefits to diesel users. The price decrease will have a positive impact on the overall economy, given the vital role that diesel plays in the logistics sector,” he said in a statement. Al Hashemi said the price revision should benefit the manufacturing sector and other supply companies with large fleets that use diesel. However, economic advisers Nasser Saidi and Associates founder Nasser Saidi said the price reduction would have just a minor impact. “Diesel, of course, is important for transport so to that extent it will lower the cost…and it will effectively mean at a consumer level, although to a very marginal level, (product prices) will decline.” However, that needed to be put “in perspective”. “Transport costs are important but not the main determinate of consumer prices…at best this will have a marginal effect. Clearly the people who use diesel in the cars will see the effect but that’s a minority of people.” Saidi also warned the reduction would be temporary as international prices would rise again. He attributed the fall in global prices to seasonal patterns, with the diesel used for heating major northern hemisphere markets of the United States and Europe not needed as they headed into summer. Saidi put out a plea to the government to instead of passing on the “negligible” savings to consumers, that they be reinvested in the sector to develop renewable energy. amanda@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading