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Home » China Environment » Al Gore’s bold 10 year plan is China’s green opportunity

Al Gore’s bold 10 year plan is China’s green opportunity

Posted by: Jason Inch    Tags:      Posted date:  July 20, 2008  |  Comment

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Last week in a major environmentally-themed speech in Washington, Al Gore called for complete elimination of carbon-based energy generation in the US within ten years. It was a bold statement, equivalent to Kennedy’s Man on the Moon address, and then some: Achieving his goal will not only require the full participation of the US government, but also that of every consumer in the United States, a far more ambitious effort than the manned moon landing. It’s an inspiring speech that I highly recommend:

Predictably some feel this is a long-shot, if not an impossibility. Yet perhaps that is the point: By aiming for the stars, at least we may reach the moon.

And I’ll go one step further to say that, if the US is to have any chance of success, China’s participation will be needed as well, to provide many of the products needed – the solar water heaters, the wind turbines, the batteries to store power in electric cars, among other things.

A growing number of Chinese firms listed domestically and abroad are positioned to profit from China’s own environmental woes by taking them as the newest business opportunities. We make this point in Supertrends of Future China (scheduled for release in about three weeks, just before the Olympics), where we devoted a full chapter to what we call the Greening Supertrend.

In brief, Greening is the intersection of China’s national environmental policy with the domestic and global trends towards clean energy and pollution reduction. A new generation of entrepreneurs in China is embracing this modern Green Revolution. By taking advantage of the domestic market size and manufacturing power, they will put China at the forefront of environmental technologies, first domestically and then, if present trends continue and Gore’s vision becomes a reality, globally.

Red Star Greening Over China

The central government has put green development as a prime objective of the 11th Five Year Plan for China’s economy. The target is further outlined in the Five Year Plan for Environmental Protection. Many critics rightly point out that national policy is often ignored at the local levels, but last year’s promotion of the State Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) to full ministry status is a sign of how seriously the central government is taking the issue.

Recently, the government has made some regulatory steps which are actually putting China in the lead of global environmental policy:For example, the plastic bag ban I discussed last week was announced, implemented, and accepted by the national population in just six months.

Replacing those bags with environmentally-sound reusable bags is just one of the new opportunities that China’s entrepreneurs have already jumped into.On a much larger scale, China’s wind and solar energy industries are taking center-stage.

The World Wind Energy Association currently ranks China as number five in a list of global wind users.China has approximately six thousand megawatts of generating capacity, about a quarter of world-leader Germany’s capacity, and not even one percent of China’s massive energy needs.Shi Pengfei, the vice-president of the Chinese Wind Energy Association, said that the National Development and Reform Commission had increased China’s target of wind-energy generation to 100,000 megawatts by 2020, five times as much as Germany’s present capacity.

Xinjiang Goldwind Science and Technology Company (SZ 02202), China’s leading wind turbine producer, went public on the Shenzhen stock exchange in 2007.Although large scale wind farms face many obstacles in China, such as an electric grid that is oriented towards cheaper coal-powered energy generation, on the strength of its domestic market growth, some analysts (additional link) believe Goldwind and other Chinese companies can rise in the next three years to challenge the world’s biggest turbine manufacturers including GE.

By 2020 the central government has pledged meeting 15 percent of China’s energy needs through renewable energy sources, including wind, biofuels, water, and solar.By 2050, the ratio is to be 30 percent including nuclear power.This means huge investments are required, but China is already a world leader in the use of at least one clean energy technology: Solar.

Star light, star bright

Al Gores bold 10 year plan is Chinas green opportunityIn many of China’s second, third or fourth tier cities, rooftops are covered by solar water heaters. The cheap, ubiquitous devices use the sun’s rays to heat water so that even rural workers can afford to take a hot shower after a long day’s work.In China, 200 million people have their water heated in this way, according to the NDRC.China has more than 50 percent of both the world’s production and use of solar water heaters, and other forms of solar energy are starting to grow as well.

Suntech Power (NYSE:STP) is the world’s third largest solar cell producer after Q-Cells of Germany and Sharp of Japan.It had US$1.4 billion in revenues in 2007.Revenues are expected to increase quickly as solar cell-generated electricity starts to approach price parity with carbon-based energy sources such as coal and currently high-priced oil.

The government is also active in solar energy policy, mandating that China should increase its current 100 million square meters of solar water heaters to 150 million by 2010, and 300 million by 2020.

With China set to take its place as the world’s largest economy by mid-century, its power needs will also dominate and, if it is not careful, the pollution problem will reach unprecedented levels.Green technologies promise to be among the best industries to be in during this challenging period of growth.  While China’s domestic market alone is a considerable prize for any green company, globally the potential is astronomical.  Gore’s call to action may help considerable to raise a green star over China.

Related Information:

A number of other commentators have written on China’s Green potential as a business opportunity. Here are a couple of articles that I recommend:

China: A Clean-tech gold rush

China’s Coming Environmental Renaissance

China’s Green Leap Forward

China’s Silver Lining

A possible Olympic legacy: A greener China

For those interested in studying environmental sciences, here is a good resource listing degree programs:

Environmental Science Degrees


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About the author
Jason Inch




1 Comment for Al Gore’s bold 10 year plan is China’s green opportunity

TCM Cola and Sinofication | China Supertrends

[...] to anti-cancer preventative supplements, and China-influenced designer bags are just the start.  Solar water heaters, solar-powered everything actually, invented elsewhere but perfected in China, are among the [...]

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  • Jason is a China-based strategy consultant and professional speaker with ten years of experience in Asia, and has been in China since 2004.
    From living and working in the Bubble Economy years in Japan, the Dot-Com boom and bust in the US, to China’s rise in the 2000s, Jason has sought out life in some of the most exciting economic environments in the world. He is currently living in Shanghai as a business advisor, professional speaker, and entrepreneur.
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    10Learn about China's Sustainable Development Supertrend at Green Drinks May 10thMay 10, 2012 上海市静安区 Muraya DCE, 4F, Building B, 1000 Chang Ping Road, Jing’An District, Shanghai

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