EU AND CHINA CLIMATE POLICY CUT FROM THE SAME CLOTH

Environmental Panorama
Brussels – Belgium
September of 2005

 

05/09/2005 – The EU and China, two key actors in the global political arena, have signed an agreement on global warming, recognizing the huge economic, social, and environmental importance of climate change.
At the Annual EU-China Summit in Beijing, China’s Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair, who holds the European Union Presidency, and the President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, agreed on a "China-EU Partnership on Climate Change and the Security of Energy Supply", a wide-ranging cooperation in energy and climate change matters.

"It is a very welcome signal that both China and the EU recognise climate change as a key geopolitical issue and are ready to take concrete action to reduce its threats," said Jennifer Morgan, Director of the WWF's Global Climate Change Programme.

"Unlike the recent Asia-Pacific Pact with the United States and other countries, this agreement includes policies, markets and technologies, which should lead to real and significant action."

Importantly, the cooperation agreement is firmly placed in the context of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Kyoto Protocol and future international climate negotiations, and reconfirms both partners' commitment to work under the world's foremost multilateral agreement on tackling climate change.

With China planning to invest an estimated €1.5 trillion in its power sector by 2030, the Partnership features key measures focusing on low-carbon technologies, with a high priority on renewable energy technologies and energy efficiency, as well as on a range of near zero-emission coal technologies such as carbon capture and storage.

This offers the opportunity to ensure the next generation of energy installations in China will be as low carbon as possible, and to avoid a lock-in in climate-damaging infrastructures.

In their partnership, China and the EU will tackle financing issues involved in these investment decisions. The partners agreed on significantly bringing down costs for modern energy technologies by 2020, to use export credits to support carbon-free technologies, and to explore market based instruments such as emissions trading.

"With this agreement, the carbon market just took a big step in moving into the big time," said Morgan. "An EU-Chinese partnership to use the market to leverage a low carbon economy is very exciting."

WWF calls upon India and the EU, who will stage their summit meeting on Wednesday in New Delhi, to step up to the mark and secure their place as global leaders on securing a climate-safe and viable energy future.

NOTES:

• Carbon Capture and Storage includes technologies to capture CO2in the production of power and other industrial processes before it is emitted. The CO2 is then pumped into geological storage spaces, mostly formations that formerly were filled with oil or natural gas. WWF supports research on geological sequestration and welcomes such research occurring in China.

• Investment figures in the Chinese energy sector according to World Energy Investment Outlook, IEA 2003

• The main financial issues discussed were carbon financing and export credits. Carbon financing includes a whole range of public and private mechanisms to put a price on CO2 emissions, thus making investments in CO2 reduction more viable. One key tool that the EU has implemented is emission trading. Another tool of common interest to both countries is the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), a tool developed under the Kyoto Protocol. CDM allows industrialised countries to account emission reductions through investments in developing countries towards their binding Kyoto reduction goals.Export credits are governmental guarantees for investment risks for industrial country investors in developing countries.

• The EU and other governments are committed to keep global average temperature increase below 2°C above pre-industrial levels to avoid dangerous climate change.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Claudia Delpero and Martin Hiller)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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