BEIJING, Feb. 20 (Xinhua) -- Experts said tackling
climate change will be one of the major topics in the U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton's upcoming China visit. China and the United States have great
potential in their cooperation.
COMMON WILL OF COOPERATION
According to media reports, Clinton and other senior
officials in the Obama administration all hope to find new fields of
cooperation, in particular, tackling climate change and environmental
protection, so as to further promote China-U.S. relations.
"Our mutual economic engagement with China was
evident during the economic growth of the past two decades. It is even clearer
now in economic hard times and in the array of global challenges we face from
nuclear security to climate change to pandemic disease and so much else," said
Clinton in her speech at the Asia Society New York Headquarters on Feb. 13.
Zhang Haibin, Director of the Center for
International Organizations Studies of Peking University, said that climate
change is high on Clinton's agenda of China visit. This shows the United States
has stressed this issue and is ready to conduct concrete dialogues on
comprehensive cooperation with the involved parties in China.
Luo Yong, Director-general of the Center for Climate
Change of the China Meteorological Administration, told Xinhua that the two
countries suffer intense severe weather events frequently. Therefore, "the
common need to combat climate change can bring about further cooperation".
"Closer cooperation with China should be a high
priority in a U.S. climate strategy," said Eileen Claussen, president of the Pew
Center on Global Climate Change, at a press conference held for the release of
the report Common Challenge, Collaborative Response. The report maintains that
U.S.-China collaboration can help catalyze a new strategic transformation to a
global, low-carbon economy that will be more sustainable while reducing
greenhouse gas emissions.
CHINA'S EFFORTS
The Chinese government has attached great importance
to the climate change issue and emphasizes global efforts on the issue. It holds
that the problems of climate change should be resolved within the framework of
sustainable development and in accordance with the principle of "common but
differentiated responsibilities," which is a core principle of the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
Both developed and developing countries are obligated
to adopt measures to decelerate and adapt to climate change. But the level of
their historical responsibilities, level and stage of development, and
capabilities and ways of contribution vary.
Developed countries should be responsible for their
accumulative emissions and current high per-capita emissions, and take the lead
in reducing emissions, in addition to providing financial support and
transferring technologies to developing countries.
The developing countries, while developing their
economies and fighting poverty, should actively adopt adaptation measures,
reduce their emissions to the lowest degree and fulfill their duties in
addressing climate change.
China has enacted policies to address issue of
climate change. According to a five-year plan, the energy consumption per-unit
GDP is expected to drop by about 20 percent by 2010 compared to that of 2005.
Another target set by China is to raise the
proportion of renewable energy (including large-scale hydropower) in the total
energy consumption to 10 percent by 2010. Meanwhile, a 20-percent increase in
the forest coverage rate is also expected to be realized.
FURTHER COOPERATION
Zhang Haibin noted that the governments of the two
countries can establish a sustainable dialogue mechanism on energy and climate
change. The United States should provide related Official Development Assistance
as well as preferential treatment on loans, financing and technology transfer to
China.
"At the early stage, it is important to launch some
large pilot projects. The experience of successful cases can be drawn upon and
introduced gradually. Both determination and patience are essential for
bilateral cooperation," he stressed.
Meanwhile, he highlighted non-governmental
cooperation in tackling climate change, which cannot be neglected.
China and the United States have worked together
actively in the field of fossil energy since the 1980s. The two countries signed
the China-U.S. Fossil Energy Protocol in 1985. In 2006, the Ministry of Science
and Technology of China and the U.S. Department of Energy reviewed the
implementation of the protocol and four project annexes, namely, Cooperation in
the Area of Power Systems, Cooperation in the Areas of Oil and Gas, and
Cooperation in the Areas of Environmental Technologies and Climate Science,
extending the validity term to 2010.
Zhang Haibin said that the two countries can make
joint efforts in many fields, such as improvement of energy efficiency and
development of new energies including wind power, solar power and biofuels.
Moreover, the U.S. experience on related research and management can be learned
by China.
"The United States should communicate more with China
to understand its concerns and reach consensus," he added.