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China plans to reduce carbon dioxide emissions per unit GDP by approximately 3.8% in 2026

China plans to reduce carbon dioxide emissions per unit GDP by approximately 3.8% in 2026
China plans to reduce carbon dioxide emissions per unit GDP by approximately 3.8% in 2026

According to documents released by the Chinese government on Thursday, China will reduce its carbon intensity - or carbon emissions per unit gross domestic product - by 17% in its current five year plan. This is an acceleration of the previous period between 2020 and '2025.

China's new five-year plan released on Thursday called for the replacement of 30 million metric tonnes per year with renewables, and pushing towards peak coal. However, it did not set further limits on coal use. China's carbon intensity was reduced by 12% during the five-year plan which ended last year.

According to a report by China's National Development and Reform Commission, its top planner, China plans to reduce its carbon intensity in 2026 by about 3.8%. China expects its carbon emissions to peak before 2030.

Some analysts were disappointed by the new carbon intensity goal. The Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air conducted research that found China needed to 'accelerate the pace of reductions in carbon intensity to 23% within the next five-year period after falling behind its Paris Agreement commitment to cut carbon intensity by more than 65% between 2005 and 2030.

"How fast carbon intensity can be reduced depends largely on how much renewable energy is available," said Yao Zhe, Greenpeace East Asia's policy advisor in Beijing.

The NDRC report stated that China would also implement a mandatory minimum quota for renewable energy consumption in the next five-year period.

In a speech last year to the United Nations, President Xi Jinping stated that China would increase its already largest wind and solar energy capacity by six times, from 2020 levels, to 3,600 gigawatts in 2035. China will likely exceed this target, based on current capacity building levels.

China has yet to announce a clear target for emissions reductions by 2030.

Xi stated in a speech at the United Nations last year that China will peak its carbon emission?by 2030, and reduce emissions between 7% and 10% by 2035.

Carbon emissions in China fell by 0.3% last year, mainly due to the reductions made in the sectors of 'transport, power and cement. It is still unclear whether they will rise again before a peak.

This year marks a planned shift from focusing solely on the energy intensity in its economy to focusing more on the carbon intensity.

The NDRC's?plan did not provide any further details about the "dual-control" system or how it would work.

The NDRC stated that it would make efforts to?replace coal with clean energy and?phase out outdated coal-fired facilities and equipment. It did not mention the previous commitment to phase out coal in the five-year plan from 2026 to 2030.

The five-year plan states that China will strive to reach its peak coal and oil consumption during the period. (Reporting and editing by Christian Schmollinger, Thomas Derpinghaus and Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)