Top China think tank proposes greenhouse gas plan

Wed Mar 25, 2009 6:40am EDT
 
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By Chris Buckley

BEIJING (Reuters) - A top Chinese state think tank has proposed a global greenhouse gas trading plan to reflect the different historic emissions of rich and poor nations, indicating deepening discussion in Beijing about climate change policy.

Researchers from the State Council Development Research Center, which advises China's leaders, laid out the plan in the March issue of the Economic Research Journal, a Chinese-language journal published on March 20 that reached subscribers this week.

The broad scheme is far from being government policy but illustrates the growing focus of decision makers here on how Beijing should handle climate change negotiations aimed at sealing a new global pact by late 2009.

Separately, a new report from the Chinese Academy of Sciences proposes the nation's total emissions of the main greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, peak between 2030 and 2040 and then stabilize and fall, helped by international technological and funding support, the official Guangming Daily reported on Wednesday.

China is now widely believed to have clearly passed the United States in annual emissions of carbon dioxide from industry, farming and land clearance.

Beijing faces calls from other governments for clearer commitments to minimize and reduce such greenhouse gases, which scientists say are dangerously heating the atmosphere.

The Beijing think tank's plan seeks a solution to the divide between developed nations, with high per capita accumulations of greenhouse gas emissions, and developing nations, including China, with low levels of per capita emissions that are set to rise in coming decades.

China's 1.3 billion people currently emit about 4 tons per person in greenhouse gases, compared with the United States at about 20 tons per person.

The answer, the think tank says, is to set emissions rights for each country, based on historic accumulation, and then let nations trade portions of those rights in an international market.

"If every country's emissions rights can be clearly defined and strictly protected, and a corresponding mechanism for market transactions can be established, emissions reductions will become a form of behavior that offers a return," they write.

RIGHT TO DEVELOP

The Beijing think tank's proposal would draw China and other poorer countries into clearer obligations to curtail greenhouse gases in the long term.

But would give their citizens larger emissions quotas than rich countries' populations, reflecting the developing world's low historic emissions and "right to develop."

Under the current Kyoto Protocol, the U.N.-backed pact governing countries' climate change obligations, China and other developing economies do not have caps on greenhouse gases.

The United States previously cited China's lack of caps as one reason for Washington staying out of the protocol's obligations.  Continued...