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Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan (R
Front) shakes hands with a participant prior to the opening of the Nobel
Laureates Beijing Forum in Beijing, on Sept, 11, 2007. The Nobel Laureates
Beijing Forum was held in Beijing on Sept. 11. (Xinhua Photo)
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BEIJING, Sept. 11 (Xinhua) -- China will vigorously
promote energy conservation and emissions reduction to tackle climate change and
promote sustainable development, Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan said on Tuesday.
"In order to ease the conflict between economic
development and environmental protection, China will stick to the concept of
human-oriented and scientific development," Zeng told the opening ceremony of an
international forum of Nobel laureates and world-renowned economists.
China would pay more attention to "the expansion of
domestic demand, the development of primary and tertiary industries, innovation
and technological progress", he said.
The government would adjust the development mode
mainly through energy conservation and emissions reduction, Zeng said, adding it
would actively promote the use of renewable energy such as hydropower, wind
energy, biomass energy and solar energy and the development of nuclear power.
"The proportion of renewable energy in overall energy
consumption should rise from the current eight percent to 15 percent in 2020,"
he said.
Thermal power and iron and steel industries with high
energy consumption and pollution would be eliminated at a faster speed, while
energy-efficient buildings and environmental-friendly light bulbs would become
dominant, Zeng said, calling for development of the recycling economy and
efficient use of the energy resources.
Forest coverage would be increased from 18.2 percent
in 2005 to20 percent in 2010, he said, adding frontier technologies such as
hydrogen fuel cell and carbon absorption would be developed to support
environmental protection.
A resource tax and pricing system, a user-pays
mechanism for mineral resources and an environment compensation system should be
established with improved laws and regulations to build an energy-saving and
environment-friendly society, he added.
Nine Nobel laureates and five world-renowned
scientists, including Robert Mundell, Edmund Phelps, Richard Schrock and Thomas
Schelling, are meeting from Sept. 11 to 14 to discuss energy efficiency with 600
Chinese scientists, officials and experts.
They are expected to give more than 50 lectures on topics such as solar energy and its market development, global warming and the reduction in greenhouse gases in Beijing.