David Fogarty, Reuters 15 Apr 10;
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - China should step up its drive to a low-carbon growth model to maintain economic development and preserve achievements that have made it the world's third largest economy, a United Nations report says.
The report by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) released on Thursday says China's current growth model will be hard to sustain as the nation becomes more urbanised and the economy keeps expanding, consuming ever more amounts of energy.
China is already the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gases from power plants, industry and transport blamed for heating up the planet and is under international pressure to curb the growth of its emissions. Coal is, and will remain, a major source of energy.
The country is also the world's most populous with 1.3 billion people and the number is expected to keep growing in coming decades. Hundreds of millions expect to migrate to the cities, threatening a massive spike in carbon emissions.
"The shift to a low-carbon development pathway is imperative as China balances further economic development with environmental sustainability and the need to respond to the threat of climate change," Khalid Malik, UNDP Resident Representative in China, said in a statement.
The report, "China and a sustainable future, toward a low carbon economy and society" and written in partnership with Renmin University of China, links economic growth, carbon emissions and human development in China.
It takes into account the numerous policy initiatives the government has launched that have driven rapid investment in renewable energy, cut energy intensity for industry and boosted environmental protection and cut pollution.
For example, China has committed to reducing carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP in 2020 by 40 percent to 45 percent compared with 2005 levels. And rapid growth of renewable energy such as wind and solar has created a sector already worth $17 billion and employing close to one million people.
STRATEGIC CHOICE
But more was needed in a nation vulnerable to the impacts of climate change and which was already experiencing greater extremes of weather, threatening livelihoods and the economy.
"If climate change impacts are not adequately addressed in China, there is a danger that three decades of achievements may be reversed. China's most strategic choice is therefore to embark on a low-carbon development path that will preserve and increase its human development achievements in the years to come," says the report.
It said it was crucial to balance maintaining job growth and the needs of millions of poor people to prevent social unrest.
Since China launched economic reforms in the late 1970s, more than 500 million people have been lifted out of poverty, it says. But more than 100 million still live below the poverty line.
China's total greenhouse gas emissions have also grown rapidly. From 1970 to 2007, the total amount rose over seven times, the report says.
If the government makes only some efforts to reduce carbon pollution, energy-related CO2 emissions will increase rapidly to 11.4 billion tonnes in 2020, 13.9 billion tonnes in 2030 and 16.2 billion tonnes in 2050, and will not peak before 2050.
Much stronger action meant there was potential for emissions reduction after 2030 but that this would be difficult without a large number of support measures and major investment.
The report concludes that energy efficiency, carbon capture and storage, renewables and nuclear power were crucial investment areas to achieving a low-carbon future. It says that over the next 20 years, nearly 350 million Chinese are expected to migrate to urban areas -- more than the current population of the United States.
"Since urbanization generally increases emissions, China will face enormous pressures to reduce emissions while economic development and urbanization move forward," it says.
Accelerated urbanization fed on energy-intensive raw materials such as steel products, cement and chemical materials.
To cope with urbanization, China would need to construct an estimated 50,000 new high-rise buildings and 170 new mass transportation systems. Rapid freight growth and more highways, railways and ports would also be needed.
(Editing by David Fox)