Energy

China says urbanization drive will be low-carbon

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2011-06-22 13:20
Large Medium Small

TIANJIN -- China will push for the use of clean power and energy-saving technologies in its massive urbanization drive across the country over the next five years, a senior energy official said Tuesday.

Qian Zhimin, deputy director with the National Energy Administration, told a low-carbon forum sponsored by the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) in Tianjin that by 2015 China will establish 100 model cities, 200 model counties, 1,000 model districts, and 10,000 model towns of green and new energy.

Related readings:
China says urbanization drive will be low-carbon Group buys help lower carbon emissions
China says urbanization drive will be low-carbon Pedaling the benefits of low-carbon life
China says urbanization drive will be low-carbon Cities have to lead the green movement
China says urbanization drive will be low-carbon China's low-carbon economy faces pressure from global trading mode

China plans to raise urbanization rate to 52 percent by 2015 and 65 percent by 2030, according to the government's 12th Five-Year-Plan (2011-2015).

Technologies such as mart grids, solar power utilities, and clean energy-powered vehicles will be promoted in city planning, Qian said, adding that the development of public transport and rail transport will be prioritized.

The official said cities should steadily increase the ratio of clean energy, including solar power, hydro-electric power, nuclear power, in the energy consumption mix while improving the efficiency in using the traditional fossil energy.

China has grown into a large energy consumer in the world over the past five years. Its per capita consumption of primary energy averaged 2.38 metric tons of standard coal in 2010, a rise of 32 percent over 2005, and the per capita natural gas consumption was 88 cubic meters, 2.4 times more than in 2005.

Coal remains the mainstay of China's energy supply, and its raw coal output has ranked first in the world for years. In 2010, its raw coal output topped 3.2 billion metric tons, about 45 percent of the world's total.

分享按钮