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China eyes closer co-op with US in energy development
BEIJING—China and the United
States might see more opportunities for trade by boosting joint energy
development, Minister of China’s National Development and Reform
Commission (NDRC) Ma Kai said Tuesday.
“There could be great potential and fat opportunities for both countries
in improving coal efficiency and promoting clean energy,” Ma said ahead
of the high-profile China-U.S. Strategic Economic Dialogue, which opens
Wednesday. Ma urged two sides to find new ways for joint energy
development, saying the United States had advanced technologies and
experience to improve coal efficiency and develop clean energy, which
were valuable to China.
The Chinese government had been promoting the use of a variety of
cleaner energy sources to reduce its reliance on coal, as well improving
its energy efficiency and pollutant control. His remarks also came as
the two countries signed a slew of agreements, including pacts on energy
cooperation, at the 18th China-U.S. Joint Commission on Commerce and
Trade (JCCT) Tuesday. One of the 14 documents was a memorandum of
understanding on cooperation of biofuel development signed by the NDRC
and the U.S. departments of agriculture and energy.
“As two of the world’s largest consumers of oil, this document may help
reduce each country’s dependence on imported oil, benefiting both U.S.
and Chinese consumers,” the U.S. Department of Agriculture said in a
statement released at the JCCT. Ma said earlier Tuesday that the Chinese
side would work out executive plans, and wished to start work soon.
China is promoting development of biofuels with financial support, as
the country saw biofuels as environmental-friendly energy sources.
Ma hoped both countries would also launch initiatives “as soon as
possible” to implement a memorandum of understanding signed in
September, which outlines cooperation in upgrading industrial energy
efficiency. Tuesday’s JCCT also saw U.S. firm Peabody Energy become an
equity partner in China’s “GreenGen” project, the country’s first
near-zero emissions coal-fueled power plant with carbon capture and
storage.
Ma said the NDRC had drawn up a guideline with dozens of suggestions on
cooperation in power generation, coal, petroleum and natural gas,
renewable energy, as well as energy conservation and environmental
protection, in a bid to boost joint energy development. “Joint energy
development between the two countries would be mutually beneficial,” he
said, adding it would not only help China improve energy consumption
structure, reduce greenhouse emissions and cut pollutant discharges, but
could also bring commercial benefits to the U.S. side.
—Xinhua |