China to cut energy consumption by 4 percent in 2006
5/3/2006 12:41
China will strive to chop down its energy consumption rate by 4 percent this
year, a new key index to guide economic and social development, Premier Wen
Jiabao announced in Beijing Sunday. "Energy consumption per unit of GDP
should fall by about 4 percent in 2006," said Wen while delivering a report on
government work at the opening meeting of the Fourth Session of the Tenth
National People's Congress (NPC), the top legislature. It is the first time
that China combines energy-efficiency with the indexes of economic growth,
price, employment and balance of payments for macro-control of its
economy. "Energy-efficiency is indeed a key economic index, but few
governments have made it a national policy," Jiang Xinmin, an expert with the
Energy Institute under the State Development and Reform Commission. China is
determined to reduce energy consumption per unit of gross domestic product (GDP)
by 20 percent and the total volume of major pollutant discharges by 10 percent
in the coming five years, a new round of economic and social development
beginning this year, Wen said in his report, citing the draft outlines of the
11th Five- Year (2006-2010) program expected to be approved by the
legislature. Necessitated by the country's current conditions and long-term
interests, these targets are designed to tackle the mounting pressure on
resources and environment and provide a clear guide for policy making, Wen
addressed the 2,927 NPC deputies present at the meeting held at the Great Hall
of the People in downtown Beijing. "Though achieving them will be quite
difficult, we have the confidence and determination to succeed," Wen said,
showing that China is resolved to build a resources-saving and environment-
friendly society. China must reduce the energy consumption per unit of GDP by
an annual rate of at least 4.4 percent to fulfill the five-year target, experts
said. The index will from now on become a substantial indicator measuring
economic performance, said Jiang. Official statistics show that the total
volume of energy consumption in China last year was equal to 2.22 billion tons
of standard coal, up 9.5 percent over the previous year and lower than the
9.9-percent economic growth rate. Energy consumption per 10,000 yuan (US$1,250)
of GDP was equivalent to 1.43 tons of standard coal, roughly the same level as
that in 2004. China has seen its economic volume quadrupled in the last two
decades of the 20th century largely due to huge investment and doubled energy
consumption. However, the obvious conflict between environment protection and
booming economic growth will challenge China's future development. The
premier called for the establishment of various standards for conserving energy,
water, land and materials in all industries, and the development of
environment-friendly products, projects and buildings. Wen added that
energy-efficiency index of all regions and major industries will be released to
the public on an annual basis. In this sense, the public will be mobilized to
join in the long-term campaign of energy and resources conservation in a bid to
bolster a recyclable economy and an environment-friendly society. "China is
stepping up economic restructuring and upgrading the pattern of economic growth
in the pursuit of higher quality and efficiency rather than speed," Jiang noted.
Xinhua news
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