BEIJING, June 24 (Xinhua) -- Under heavy pressure to
cut energy consumption, China is now turning the spotlight on to construction
projects, the transportation sector and government buildings.
China's top legislature on Sunday began deliberating
a draft amendment to the Law on Conserving Energy, which details measures to
avoid energy waste in the three areas to improve energy efficiency and cut
pollution emissions.
Under a five-year plan to 2010, China pledged to cut
energy consumption per unit of gross domestic product (GDP) by 20 percent, or
four percent each year. But, the consumption actually fell by just 1.23 percent
last year.
"Achieving the target is highly problematic. Energy
consumption in some areas and industries just keeps rising," Fu Zhihuan,
chairman of the Financial and Economic Committee of the National People's
Congress (NPC), told lawmakers in a report.
Fu said energy consumption in these three areas has
been rising rapidly. He said they had not been given enough attention and were
the "weak link" in China's energy-saving campaign.
Official statistics show that construction accounted
for 27.5 percent of China's total energy consumption in 2005, transportation
16.3 percent and government buildings 6.7 percent.
The draft, tabled to lawmakers for a first reading,
says that construction project must reach obligatory energy-saving standards and
buildings and plants already built will be subject to regular inspection by
building authorities.
It also says Chinese cities will gradually replace
antiquated central heating with modern household heating systems that can be
individually regulated.
Other energy-saving measures include strict control
of the indoor temperature of public buildings and restrictions on decorative
lighting for large buildings.
China has built 1.06 billion square meters of energy
efficient buildings, but the figure represents only 7 percent of the total floor
space of existing buildings in urban China, statistics from the Ministry of
Construction show.
According to a survey by the ministry in 30 regions,
the four municipalities of Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin and Chongqing are doing
relatively well in implementing energy saving codes, but other regions are a
long way behind in technological standards and government supervision.
The draft, which almost doubles the articles of the
original law, also requires governments at all levels to increase investment in
public transport, improve services and encourage the public to use public
transport.
China, once known as the kingdom of bicycles, has
overtaken Japan to become the world's second largest auto market after the
United States with Chinese people's love for private vehicles showing no sign of
abating. The number of privately owned motor vehicles rose 18.8 percent
year-on-year to 22 million in China in 2006.
The draft says that the Chinese government encourages
the development, production, selling and use of environmental-friendly vehicles
and new types of automobile propelled by new clean fuel, in an effort to save
energy and cut emissions.
The draft also requires governments at all levels to
make energy-saving plans for their office buildings and make the details public.
It bans government from purchasing high
energy-consuming equipment, saying that energy-saving products should be the
priority in government procurement.
The State Council, or the cabinet, in early June
issued a circular, ordering that the temperature of all air-conditioned public
rooms in China should be kept at no lower than 26 degrees Celsius.
All government agencies, associations, groups,
companies and private owners in public buildings should strictly comply with
this rule, according to the circular.
The draft also highlighted energy efficiency in the
industrial sector, saying that China will continue to push forward industrial
restructuring and technical innovation to gradually weed out outdated production
methods.
The six high energy-consuming and highly polluting
industries -- electricity, steel, nonferrous metals, construction materials, oil
processing and chemicals -- which account for nearly 70 percent of energy
consumption and sulfur dioxide discharges of the entire industrial sector, grew
by 20.6 percent in the first quarter of 2007, 6.6 percentage points higher than
the same period a year earlier.
The government will issue preferential policies in
financial investment, taxation, price, credit and government procurement to
encourage energy-saving, according to the draft.
The Chinese government has announced a series of
measures to cut energy consumption this year in order to meet strict energy
efficiency and pollutant reduction targets, which it failed last year.
The State Council has set up a leading group head by
Premier Wen Jiabao to oversee the national efforts for energy efficiency and
discharge reduction.
Experts believe that by sharpening rules and
punishments in the nine-year-old law, China will be able to achieve the widely
publicized targets by 2010 and move in the direction of sustainable development.
"If China fails to significantly reduce energy
consumption this year, it will be almost impossible for the country to reach the
goal by 2010," said Dai Yande, deputy director of the energy institution under
the NDRC.
"The draft amendment, which come at a critical
moment, will provide a strong legal basis for China to further intensify its
energy-saving campaign," Dai said.