Cape Times

Joint climate response for a community of life

China has clear path mapped ahead to reduce emissions and articulate­s 6-point initiative

- CHEN XIADONG Chen is the Ambassador-designate of China to SA

ON APRIL 22 President Xi Jinping was invited to attend the Leaders Summit on Climate and he delivered an important speech.

He called on the internatio­nal community to address together the challenges in global environmen­tal governance with unpreceden­ted ambition and action, and to jointly foster a community of life for man and Nature. This has provided a clear direction for advancing global climate governance.

China has proposed a systemic solution to address global climate change. President Xi put forward at the summit a six-point initiative:

u We must be committed to harmony between man and Nature. It is important to respect and protect Nature and follow its laws and to foster a new relationsh­ip where man and Nature can both prosper and live in harmony.

u We must be committed to green developmen­t. We need to seize the enormous opportunit­y in green transition, let the power of innovation drive us to upgrade our economic, energy and industrial structures, and make sure that a sound environmen­t is there to buttress sustainabl­e economic and social developmen­t worldwide.

u We must be committed to systemic governance. We need to follow the innate laws of the ecosystem and properly balance all elements and aspects of Nature. This is a way that may take us where we want to be – an ecosystem in sound circulatio­n and overall balance.

u We must be committed to a people-centred approach. We need to look for ways to protect the environmen­t, grow the economy, create jobs and remove poverty all at the same time so as to deliver social equity and justice in the course of green transition and increase people’s sense of benefit, happiness and security.

u We must be committed to multilater­alism. We need to uphold the UN-centred internatio­nal system, comply with the objectives and principles laid out in the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and its Paris Agreement, and strive to deliver the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

u We must be committed to the principle of common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities. Developed countries need to increase climate ambition

and action. At the same time, they need to make concrete efforts to help developing countries strengthen the capacity and resilience against climate change. China always honours its climate change commitment.

President Xi reiterated the vision that China will strive to peak carbon dioxide emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060.

This major strategic decision is made based on our sense of responsibi­lity to build a community with a shared future for mankind and our own need to secure sustainabl­e developmen­t.

It is in line with the “highest possible ambition” requiremen­t of the Paris Agreement and indeed reflects China’s highest possible climate ambition.

When developed countries take 50 to 60 years to go from carbon peak to carbon neutrality, China will take only 30 years to deliver the same.

This means that China needs to make the world’s biggest cut in carbon emission intensity in the shortest time span in world history. It also means that there needs to be a broad and deep economic and social systemic change, which is an important element and active choice for China’s

high-quality economic developmen­t.

The targets of carbon peak and carbon neutrality have been added to China’s overall plan for ecological conservati­on. We are now making an action plan to strictly limit the increase in coal consumptio­n over the 14th Five-Year Plan period and phase it down in the 15th Five-Year Plan period.

Moreover, China has decided to accept the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol and tighten regulation­s over non-carbon dioxide emissions. China’s national carbon market will also start trading.

China takes the lead in global climate co-operation. As a participan­t, contributo­r and trailblaze­r in global ecological conservati­on, China attaches great importance to global co-operation against climate change.

We are firmly committed to putting multilater­alism into action and promoting a fair and equitable system of global environmen­tal governance for win-win co-operation.

China has played a key role in the conclusion, coming-into-effect and implementa­tion of the Paris Agreement.

In recent years, China has been implementi­ng a national strategy of actively responding to climate change. We are focused on pursuing green developmen­t and a low carbon transition, laying a solid foundation for delivering the Paris Agreement.

Not long ago, Chinese, French and German leaders held a video summit. China and the US issued a joint statement addressing the climate crisis. China also held an online seminar on ecological environmen­t protection at the China Tibet Trans-Himalaya Forum for Internatio­nal Co-operation.

All of these engagement­s show that

China is playing a leading role in global climate governance through multilater­al and bilateral dialogue and co-operation. China will host COP15 to the Convention on Biological Diversity this October and looks forward to working with all parties to enhance global governance on biodiversi­ty. We support COP26 to the UNFCCC in achieving positive outcomes.

China always helps others in responding to climate change. As we in China often say “it is more important to show people how to fish than just giving them fish”. China has done its best to help developing countries build capacity against climate change.

From remote sensing satellites for climate monitoring in Africa to low-carbon demonstrat­ion zones in South-east Asia and to energy-efficient lights in small island countries, such co-operation has yielded real, tangible and solid results.

China has also made ecological co-operation a key part of Belt and Road co-operation and pursued green infrastruc­ture, green energy, green transport and green finance, so as to jointly build green economies with Belt and Road partner countries.

Both China and South Africa are major developing countries deeply affected by climate change.

As members of Basic countries (Brazil, South Africa, India and China), we have been working together closely in various fields and at various levels to address climate change.

We are both committed to enhancing climate ambition and accelerati­ng climate action. We both uphold the primacy of multilater­alism and adherence to the principle of common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities. We also both emphasise the responsibi­lities of developed countries to support developing countries in climate mitigation and adaptation.

Our two countries share very similar positions on climate change, on promoting global climate governance and especially on protecting the interests of developing countries.

China and South Africa have decided to establish a joint working group to deliver the implementa­tion plan of the China-South Africa MOU on Climate Change. We have also agreed on co-operating in policy exchanges, informatio­n sharing and energy transition.

There is a long way to go in addressing global climate change. China is willing to work with South Africa and Africa at large to continue to deepen South-South climate co-operation, actively promote global climate change governance, discuss climate solutions, seek ways for harmony between man and Nature, and jointly build a community of life for man and Nature.

Our countries share similar positions on climate change, on promoting global climate governance and on protecting the interests of developing countries

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 ??  ?? XIE Zhenhua, China’s Special Envoy for Climate Change, addresses a media briefing on Chinese President Xi Jinping’s attendance at the virtual internatio­nal Leaders Summit on Climate, at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in Beijing. | EPA
XIE Zhenhua, China’s Special Envoy for Climate Change, addresses a media briefing on Chinese President Xi Jinping’s attendance at the virtual internatio­nal Leaders Summit on Climate, at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in Beijing. | EPA
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