海角大神

China's energy crackdown: more PR than big efficiency step?

As part of a China energy crackdown to meet efficiency targets, leaders are directing 2,000 factories to close. But it appears many of the locales have already been shuttered.

|
Jason Lee/Reuters
A tree stands in front of the water-cooling towers of a coal-fired power plant in Beijing July 21. As part of a China energy crackdown to meet efficiency targets, leaders are directing 2,000 factories to close by Sept. 30. However, many appear to have shut down already, some as long as two years ago.

The Chinese government鈥檚 much-ballyhooed new pledge to close thousands of energy-guzzling factories seems more a public signal of its intent to boost energy efficiency than a concrete step.

That is because, of the 2,087 factories threatened with closure by Sept. 30, listed on the Industry Ministry鈥檚 website on Sunday night, many appear to have shut down already, some as long as two years ago.

Three out of 4 blacklisted companies contacted by 海角大神 said the facilities targeted for closure were no longer functional.

鈥淲e shut down those two furnaces in early 2009,鈥 said a staffer at the Aosen Steel Company in Xinji, who identified himself only as Mr. Wang. 鈥淔or many other steel companies, if their facilities are on the list, most of them are already either dismantled or out of use.鈥

At the Ningbo Zhenjiang Tongbao Paper Co., where three of its mills are on the ministry鈥檚 list, it was a similar story. 鈥淲e shut those mills in March 2008,鈥 said spokesman Pan Guangshu. 鈥淭hey were very old. We are installing new machinery that will burn sawdust instead of coal and is more energy efficient.鈥

The government鈥檚 warning that companies must shut outdated plants within six weeks or lose access to bank loans, new investment, and land for construction followed a threat last May by Premier Wen Jiabao that he would use an 鈥渋ron hand鈥 to increase energy efficiency.

It also came three days after the government revealed it had canceled preferential power tariffs for energy-intensive companies run by local governments.

Good progress 鈥 until last year

Until last year China听appeared to be making good progress toward meeting its goal of reducing energy use per unit of production by 20 percent between 2005 and 2010. Four years of steady cuts achieved a 14.4 percent reduction by the end of 2009.

Beijing is keen to increase its energy efficiency not only to improve its environmental record (it is the largest emitter of CO2 and other greenhouse gases) but also to strengthen its energy security: China recently outstripped the United States听as the world鈥檚 biggest energy consumer, according to the International Energy Agency.

But as Beijing鈥檚 massive economic stimulus plan boosted output of steel and cement, China鈥檚 energy efficiency fell back by 3.2 percent in the first three months of this year. 鈥淭he reverse greatly increased the difficulty of our work for the last three quarters of this year,鈥 Mr. Wen warned.

It is doubtful, however, that the blacklist issued Sunday will have as much impact as was at first hoped, since a significant proportion of the targeted facilities appear to be no longer operational.

鈥淎 lot of them have closed already,鈥 says Lin Boqiang, head of the Center for Energy Economics Research at Xiamen University, because 鈥渓ocal governments picked the companies that were about to shut anyway as the ones to report. That way they chose the easiest ones.鈥

The unprecedented public list, naming and shaming firms, is important nevertheless, argues Yang Fuqiang, a climate-change expert with the Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) in Beijing.

Often, he points out, local governments have evaded Beijing鈥檚 edicts to shut down a certain percentage of an industry鈥檚 capacity that were hard to enforce and 鈥渢hey protected all their factories because they brought in income.

鈥淭he question is not whether the government鈥檚 policy is good,鈥 Dr. Yang adds, 鈥渋t is implementation, how serious they are. Putting named firms on a blacklist makes it easier to cut them off from banks and investors鈥 unless they meet government energy efficiency targets, he says. 鈥淭his time they are serious.鈥

Professor Lin agrees. 鈥淚f they weren鈥檛 serious they would not have made this list public,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he government wants to show people that it is doing something seriously. They want to show their determination to take out small capacity, low efficiency production.鈥

But given the flaws in the list, he adds, 鈥渢o reach the 20 percent target, they will need to do more.鈥



You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to China's energy crackdown: more PR than big efficiency step?
Read this article in
/World/Asia-Pacific/2010/0811/China-s-energy-crackdown-more-PR-than-big-efficiency-step
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe