Launch event for COVID-19 Climate Tracker China 2020
The new COVID-19 China Energy Impact Tracker explores China’s carbon-intensive economic recovery and its climate ambitions from a historical and international perspective.
Berlin, 30 April 2021. During the COVID-19 pandemic and an increasingly contentious international environment, China is the only major economy that witnessed positive economic growth in 2020. Meanwhile, China’s climate pledge of peaking national carbon emissions before 2030 and achieving carbon neutrality by 2060 is moving the country to the forefront of clean energy transition. Against this backdrop, Agora Energiewende and the Columbia University Global Centers | Beijing co-organized the launch event of a report entitled the COVID-19 China Energy Impact Tracker: A Recap of 2020 in Beijing on April 29 local time.
“Never let a good crisis go to waste”
“Agora obviously did not waste the crisis,” commented one of the high-level discussants. The report launched in Beijing is already the third issue of the COVID China tracker series, which provides regular updates on how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected China’s energy sector, from energy supply and consumption to carbon emissions and other key indicators.
According to Agora’s analysis, China did seize the moment to a certain extent. Supply chain disruptions in early 2020, which also affected renewable energy projects, shrank China’s economy for the first time in more than four decades: nonetheless, the country has made great strides with clean energy transition, especially in terms of new wind and solar capacity installations. For example, China built more than half of the world’s added offshore wind capacity in 2020.
Carbon neutrality – China’s proactive strategic choice
While China’s renewable energy market witnessed record-breaking growth, coal-fired power capacity has also continued to increase. In 2020, 38.4 GW was commissioned in China, more than three times the amount built elsewhere worldwide. Fortunately, Chinese president Xi Jinping recently announced that coal-fired power plants would be strictly controlled during the 14th Five-Year Plan (FYP) period from 2021 to 2025 and then curtailed in the 15th FYP period from 2026 to 2030.
Though China’s climate pledge came as a surprise to the international community and domestic industry insiders, Beijing has reconfirmed such an ambition was “a major strategic decision made by the ruling Party’s Central Committee after careful consideration.” In retrospect, the pledge seems to be a proactive strategic choice, given Beijing’s rising anxiety over energy security, global governance and its role in an increasingly contentious geopolitical environment.
Not surprisingly, coal has become the center of the paradoxes:
- China as the first ever “hybrid superpower” in the modern era vs. the Chinese decision makers’ lingering “developing country” mentality.
- China as the largest renewable and electric vehicle markets in the world vs. politically powerful fossil energy interest groups and the social impacts of the clean energy transition.
- Last but not least, China’s efforts in pledging carbon neutrality by 2060 vs. additional international climate initiatives such as the carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) under discussion in the European Union.
Energy integration – solving the paradoxes step by step
To move the clean energy transition agenda forward in China, energy system integration instead of fragmentation should be the path to take. Energy sector reform is expected to overcome barriers preventing the systematic integration of the Chinese energy sector.
Nevertheless, how politically plausible solutions may unfold is still not clear. Following the release of the country’s overarching 14th FYP for Economic and Social Development and the Long-range Objectives Through the Year 2035, Chinese decision-makers must balance short-term economic development opportunities from energy- and emissions-intensive investment against the long-term strategic interest of achieving carbon neutrality before 2060.
Kick off policy discussion
COVID-19 China Energy Impact Tracker: A Recap of 2020 does not intend to prescribe a solution package for either China’s green recovery or the clean energy transition. Instead, it aims to better inform the international community and Chinese audiences alike about the impact of COVID-19 on the Chinese energy economy and provoke a policy discussion on how China could make its clean energy transition agenda compatible with not only its own national circumstances but also global climate ambition.
It is inspiring that, during the launch of the COVID tracker, senior experts from the front line of China’s energy and climate community offered many constructive opinions to further improve our research products, which is expected to improve future issues of the Tracker.
The COVID-19 China Energy Impact Tracker is available for free download below.
About Agora Energiewende
Agora Energiewende develops scientifically sound, politically feasible ways to ensure the success of the energy transition – in Germany, Europe and the rest of the world. The organization works independently of economic and partisan interests. Its only commitment is to climate action.
Columbia Global Centers | Beijing
The Columbia Global Centers | Beijing was established in March 2009 as one of the first in the network of Columbia Global Centers. Serving as an important regional hub for the University community in East Asia, the Center facilitates and promotes academic exchanges, research, and scholarship programs in the region, preparing our faculty, students, and alumni with broad global views and international experiences.
Further reading
Downloads
-
pdf 481 KB
Launch event COVID Tracker
Press release
For further information
-
Craig Morris
Senior Manager International Communication (until July 2021)