BEIJING, Feb. 12 -- China will launch a Clean
Development Mechanism Fund in March to help finance climate change projects,
according to sources with the Ministry of Finance.
Ju Kuilin, a senior official with the ministry, said the fund has been approved by the State Council, or China's
Cabinet.
A group formed by seven authorities including the
National Development and Reform Commission and ministries of finance, and
science and technology will be responsible for managing the fund.
The fund will collect carbon credit transaction
income, donations from international financial organizations and individuals as
well as other sources approved by the State Council.
According to Ju, the fund has got a 6.4 million
U.S.dollars loan from the World Bank, and Europe will lend a further 500 million
euros (650 million dollars).
The Chinese government had approved nearly 300 CDM
projects by the end of January, including wind power, hydropower and landfill
gas power generation. With all these projects starting or to be started, the
fund will absorb around 2 billion dollars.
Under the Kyoto Protocol that came into effect in
2005, 38 industrialized countries must reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by
an average of 5.2 percent below 1990 levels, between 2008 and 2012.
The CDM is a market-based mechanism that allows these
countries to use the credits to offset Kyoto obligations, by investing in clean
and green energy projects in developing countries such as China.
China and the United Nations plan to set up a carbon
trading exchange in Beijing, making the city an important center for a
multi-billion-dollar trade in global carbon credits.
China now accounts for one-third of the global carbon
credits market, behind India. The UN predicts that China will become the largest
carbon credits provider by 2012, accounting for 41 percent of the global market.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)