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Items with tag:"China"

Global carbon dioxide emissions fall in 2009 - past decade still sees rapid emissions growth

Section: News

Category: Emissions

2010-07-27 16:58:23
By Amy Heinzerling

8966_global_co2_emissions_2009_united_states_chinaIn 2009, carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in China-the world's leading emitter-grew by nearly 9 percent. At the same time, emissions in most industrial countries dropped, bringing global CO2 emissions from fossil fuel use down from a high of 8.5 billion tons of carbon in 2008 to 8.4 billion tons in 2009. Yet this drop follows a decade of rapid growth: over the 10 previous years, global CO2 emissions rose by an average of 2.5 percent a year-nearly four times as fast as in the 1990s. Increasing temperatures and the resulting melting ice sheets and rising sea levels demonstrate the destructive effects of the carbon accumulating in the atmosphere.

CO2  China  United States  carbon emissions  growth 

Read more about Global Carbon Dioxide Emissions Fall In 2009 - Past Decade Still Sees Rapid Emissions Growth...
Green energy can win Europe technology race with China and US

Section: News

Category: Green Energy

2010-07-09 15:38:12
8900_green_energy_europe_us_chinaGreen energy can help Europe regain a competitive advantage in the international technology race, while cutting ballooning fuel costs, creating jobs and slashing carbon emissions. These are the findings of a new study commissioned by Greenpeace and the European Renewable Energy Council (EREC) and launched today in Brussels. The third edition of the EU Energy [R]evolution shows that a drive for renewables and energy efficiency can ensure that the EU does not fall behind China and the United States in green technological innovation. The study, carried out by the Institute of Technical Thermodynamics of the German Aerospace Centre (DLR), demonstrates that 97% of Europe's electricity and 92% of its total energy use could come from renewables in 2050, cutting CO2 emissions by 95% with no need for nuclear power or carbon capture and storage. Even taking into account investment costs, savings on fossil fuels would save European economies an average of €19 billion every year up to 2050. Hundreds of thousands of new jobs would also boost EU economies. China  Europe  European Union  United States  green energy 

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Danish minister to promote environment technology in China

Section: News

Category: Green Energy

2010-06-25 14:33:23
8840_danish_environment_minister_chinaThe Danish Minister for the Environment, Karen Ellemann, is currently in China to promote Danish environmental and energy technology as well as to sign a collaboration agreement with the Chinese minister for water resources. Combating air pollution, managing growing amounts of waste and protection of water resources have increasingly high priority in China - all areas where Denmark can offer significant experience and a range of technologies. "The main purpose of the trip is to create and nurture our connections with Chinese decision-makers, so that we can promote Danish companies' export opportunities to China in the environmental technology area. It not only benefits Denmark, but also the environment in China. It is important that we show our responsibility in the best possible way by encouraging transfer of our experience and technologies, so that China is prepared to unite growth with better protection of the environment," says Karen Ellemann. China  Denmark  environment  technology 

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Is China trying to “lock up” natural resources around the world?

Section:

Category:

2010-06-09 03:50:13 Abstract

The rapid emergence of China as a major industrial power poses a complex challenge for the world's natural resources. This column argues that the Chinese government-backed investments in natural resource supplies are predominately in areas that will help expand, diversify, and improve competition in the global supplier system. But potential geopolitical consequences remain a reason for concern.

Article

8940_china_lock_up_natural_resourcesBacked by the Chinese government, Chinese companies have been acquiring equity stakes in natural resource companies, extending loans to mining and petroleum investors, and writing long-term procurement contracts for oil and minerals. These activities have aroused concern that China might be "locking up" natural resource supplies, gaining "preferential access" to available output, extending "control" over the world's extractive industries (Silk 2006).
The empirical question

The empirical question I address here is whether Chinese equity acquisitions, loans, and long-term procurement contracts help consolidate a tightly concentrated supply base while securing preferential access for Chinese buyers? Or do these actions help multiply sources and diversify the supply base, thus making the provision of output more competitive for all buyers?

This investigative focus is deliberately narrow and precise. It assesses the impact of Chinese resource procurement on the structure of the global supply base. The broader policy discussion in the concluding section raises other separate important issues, including the effect of Chinese resource procurement on rogue states, on authoritarian leadership, on civil wars, on corrupt payments and the deterioration of governance standards, and on environmental damage. Such effects may make patterns of Chinese resource procurement objectionable, on grounds quite apart from the debate about possible "lock up", "tie up", and "control" of access on the part of China and Chinese companies.

Business School strategic management literature identifies four fundamental types of natural resource procurement structures for a large buyer.

1. Take an equity stake to create a "special relationship" with a major producer. Buyers and/or their home governments take an equity stake in a "major" producer so as to procure an equity-share of production on terms comparable to other co-owners.

2. Take an equity stake to create a "special relationship" with the competitive fringe. Buyers and their home governments take an equity stake in an "independent" producer so as to procure an equity-share of production on terms comparable to other co-owners.

3. Loan capital to be repaid in output to a major producer. Buyers (and/or their home government) make a loan to a "price maker" producer in return for a purchase agreement to service the loan.

4. Loan capital to be repaid in output to the competitive fringe. Buyers (and/or their home government) make a loan to a "price taker" producer in return for a purchase agreement to service the loan.

These four categories provide the basis for giving operational definition to "tying up" or gaining "preferential access" to supplies. If the buyer-seller arrangement simply solidifies legal claim to a given structure of production (categories 1 and 3), "tying up" or gaining "preferential access" to supplies has zero-sum implications for other consumers. What is noteworthy, however, is that if the buyer-seller arrangement expands and diversifies sources of output more rapidly than growth in world demand (categories 2 and 4), the zero-sum implication vanishes as other consumers have easier access to a larger and more competitive global resource base.

Figure 1 presents the scorecard of the sixteen largest of China's procurement arrangements showing a few instances in which Chinese natural resource companies take an equity stake to create a "special relationship" with a major producer. But the predominant pattern is to take equity stakes and/or write long-term procurement contracts with the competitive fringe.

A brief review of five smaller Chinese procurement arrangements does not suggest that there is significant selection-bias in looking at these sixteen largest projects.

The rapid emergence of China as a major industrial power poses a complex challenge for global resource markets. On the demand side, Chinese appetite for vast amounts of energy and minerals puts tremendous strain on the international supply system. On the supply side, Chinese efforts to procure raw materials can exacerbate the problems of high demand, or help solve the problems of high demand. Which outcome Chinese procurement arrangements generate depends upon whether those arrangements solidify a concentrated global supplier system, or expand, diversify, and increase competition in the global supplier system. The evidence presented above shows that Chinese efforts - like Japanese deployments of capital and purchase agreements - fall predominantly into categories that help expand, diversify, and make more competitive the global supplier system.

8940_china_lock_up_oil_reservesChinese attempts to exercise control over "rare earth elements" mining may constitute a significant exception, however. The term "rare earth", according to the US Geological Survey, "is a historical misnomer; persistence of the term reflects unfamiliarity rather than true rarity." The US was self-sufficient in rare earth production until the mid-1980s, now more than 90% is imported from China ($127 million in 2008). Rare earth minerals are crucial for a growing an array of civilian and military products. Historically the rare earth mining industry has been characterised by excess capacity, and oversupply. In August 2009 China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology issued a draft policy to set an annual export quota of 35,000 tons, a potential ban on exports of at least five types of rare earth elements, and a series of steps to control mining and improve environmental practices. These actions may be directed at securing control over international markets; at the same time, they are being deployed as a tool to compel more foreign investment and more value-added in associated in industries in inland China. Concerned about access to supplies, mining companies and buyers have shown interest in developing new sites in Vietnam, Kazakhstan, Sweden, and Canada, as well as restarting production in the US. China meanwhile has pursued an aggressive policy of acquiring equity stakes in new producers, in particular in Australia.

Deng Xiaoping once noted that while the Mideast has oil, China has rare earth elements. How should national authorities react to the prospect of Chinese investment in offshore rare earth elements companies? The foreign acquisition analytics in the rare earth sector fit well within the broader framework laid out here; Chinese investment in a small independent producer whose impact can do nothing except help expand supply and make the industry more competitive should be encouraged; Chinese investment in a more major producer that perhaps puts the Chinese owners (and Chinese government) in a position to control or constrain production should be viewed with circumspection.

The impact of Chinese procurement activities on the structure of supplier industries, however, is only one dimension of the challenge posed by Chinese natural resource acquisition. The natural-resource-strategist-from-Mars might well applaud China's vigorous support for oil production in the Sudan or Iran, and for oil transport, natural gas, and mineral production in Myanmar. But the US and other allies are rightly appalled at the consequences for regional conflict, support for terrorist groups, violation of human rights, and oppression. Finally, provision of equity capital and loans in return for natural resources form part of larger Chinese strategy toward Central Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, and the South Pacific.

Figure 1. Scorecard of China's procurement arrangements

8940_figure_1

Table 1 illustrates several points. First, the tax credit per gallon of gasoline saved varies from zero to over $11 per gallon. Second, certain hybrid vehicles that get high mileage are excluded from the credit because they have been successful in the market place. Third, certain high mileage vehicles are excluded from the subsidy because they do not use specified technology. Note that the Corolla gets nearly the same mileage as the Tribute Hybrid. This is the most egregious violation of technology neutrality. The tax credit provides no incentive to tinker with the internal combustion engine to achieve increases in vehicle efficiency despite the many opportunities that exist to make the internal combustion engine more efficient. US tax policy should provide the same incentives to improve mileage regardless of the technology put in place.

Problem 3: Subsidies are wasteful

Ideally we want subsidies targeted to marginal investments. But often they end up supporting inframarginal investments, i.e. investments that would have taken place in the absence of the policy. A good example of this is the $0.50 per gallon alternative fuels mixture credit. This credit is intended to encourage the addition of biodiesel and other biomass based fuels to petroleum to reduce petroleum use. Recently it has emerged that many paper firms are taking the credit for mixing diesel fuel with black liquor, a biomass by-product of paper making that historically has been used by the industry as a fuel source for their boilers. Controversy has arisen over whether paper firms are adding diesel fuel to black liquor purely for the purpose of claiming the tax credit biodiesel mixture tax credit (Mouawad and Krauss 2009). This is troubling on two levels. First, it may be highly inefficient if credits are being provided for inframarginal activities. This is a common problem with any subsidy. We want to provide the incentive to firms that would not have undertaken the desirable activity in the absence of the subsidy. But we don't want to provide the subsidy to firms that would have undertaken the activity regardless of the subsidy. Yet the example from the paper industry is troubling beyond the inframarginal nature of the subsidy. If the tax credit is raising the demand for diesel fuel in order to make the biofuel eligible for the credit, then it is having the perverse effect of raising rather than lowering demand for petroleum products.

Problem 4: Subsidies interact in unexpected ways with other policies

Subsidies can be rendered ineffective or more expensive through their interaction with other policies. A simple example here is the interaction of the hybrid vehicle tax credit and the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards. Allowing tax credits for hybrids encourages the production and purchase of high mileage vehicles. But the Corporate Average Fuel Economy sets minimum fleet mileage standards for automakers. Producing more hybrid vehicles relaxes the mileage constraint for automakers and allows them to sell more low mileage vehicles. The result is that federal tax collections are reduced with no improvement in automobile mileage.

An alternative to subsidies

Most if not all of the problems identified above disappear if we replace the current system of tax subsidies for carbon free technologies with a market-based system to set positive and gradually increasing carbon prices. It looks like we're on track to set the carbon price, either through a cap and trade system or some form of carbon charge. But insufficient attention is being paid to removing the various tax subsidies currently in place.

Contact Information

Author: Theodore H. Moran

Affiliation: Marcus Wallenberg Chair at the School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University

References
  • Moran, Ted (2010), “Is China trying to “lock up” natural resources around the world?”, This study is being prepared as a Working Paper for the Peterson Institute of International Economics. The draft study may be received via a request to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
  • Silk, Mitchell (2006), “Are Chinese Companies Taking Over the World?Chicago Journal of International Law.

Source: VoxEU.org

China  coal  natural gas  natural resources  oil 

Secretary Chu will travel to China to highlight clean energy partnerships

Section: News

Category: Green Energy

2010-04-29 16:45:52
8614_united_states_china_energy_partnershipU.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu will travel to China from May 24th to 28th to highlight the benefit of U.S.-China partnerships and cooperation in the clean energy sector. He will visit with government officials, academia and members of the private sector in both Beijing and Shanghai to learn more about ways in which the two countries can work together on clean energy research and technology development. "As the world's two top energy consumers, energy producers and greenhouse gas emitters, the United States and China have already begun to look at innovative ways our two countries can benefit from working together and sharing ideas for clean energy technology," said Secretary Chu. "I look forward to strengthening those partnerships, because we can learn from each other and accomplish more working together than working alone." China  Chu  United States  clean energy  partnership 

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