MEXICO CITY, Aug. 26 (Xinhua) -- China is seeking to
step up cooperation with other developing nations including Mexico to address
climate change while maintaining economic growth, Chinese Ambassador to Mexico
told an audience at a university here Wednesday.
"China wishes to protect the environment and develop
its economy at the same time," Yin Hengmin said when addressing an audience at
the National Autonomous University of Mexico, the nation's largest.
"There is a clear understanding that developing
nations have a responsibility, although developed nations have more
responsibilities since they started their industrial development earlier," he
said.
Climate change has been an issue at the G20 London
Summit in April, which mainly focused on the global economic recession. G20
groups the seven most industrialized nations as well as the European Union,
China, Russia, Brazil, India, Turkey, Mexico, Argentina, Australia, Indonesia,
South Korea, South Africa and Saudi Arabia.
Yin said that China hopes to tackle the issue with
Mexico and others at the upcoming G20 summit in the U.S. city of Pittsburgh on
Sept. 24-25.
"We have a clear position," he said, "It is a
commitment to responsibilities made in the U.N. framework, in the Kyoto Protocol
and the Bali roadmap."
He was referring to the legally binding international
environment treaty adopted in Japanese city of Kyoto under which countries will
reduce their collective emission of greenhouse gases and a clear agenda agreed
by over 180 countries in Indonesian resort island of Bali to tackle global
warming.
As part of the efforts, China is working to reduce
its energy dependence on coal, one of the most polluting fossil fuels, and to
switch to other resources including nuclear, solar, hydroelectric and other
energies that produce less carbon dioxide (CO2).
CO2 is the most common example of a greenhouse gas
that traps heat in the atmosphere and contributes to large unpredictable changes
in the weather system.
As for economic development, Yin said China has more
to share with Mexico by boosting mutual investments.
"There is a 17.5-billion-U.S. dollar trade volume
between China and Mexico," he said, noting that China enjoys a trade surplus in
bilateral trade.
He encouraged Mexican businessmen to take bolder
actions when investigating the Chinese market, citing Mexican bread maker Bimbo
and Grupo Modelo which sells beers under the brand Corona as two successful
cases.
"I am happy to find Chinese beer Tsingtao in Mexico
and I am just as happy to find Corona in China," he said.
He also said that Chinese business people welcome
competition. "China is not looking for a surplus (in bilateral trade). China is
looking for positive growth."
Yin said that he is urging state inspectors in
Beijing to schedule tours to inspect the animal and food hygiene situation in
Mexico, a move that would open China's pork market to Mexican exports, under a
treaty signed by Mexican President Felipe Calderon during his July 2008 official
visit to China.
"I am urging state administrators to send experts to
Mexico. I believe there is great potential for pork," he said, describing it as
one of many areas where China and Mexico could collaborate.
He said China has worked hard to spur domestic
consumption with a 585-billion-dollar stimulus plan aiming to boost annual gross
domestic product (GDP) growth to 8 percent, a rate needed to create jobs for
some 8 million people entering China's job market every year.
"All nations can benefit from China's growth and
development," Yin said, citing the Three Gorges Dam hydropower generation
project on the Yangtze River, which has created work for foreign companies such
as Alstom of France, ABB of Switzerland, Kvaerner of Norway, General Electric of
the United States and Siemens of Germany.