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China wants green growth in next five years

US state budgets pitting young against old: Bill Gates
Long Beach, California (AFP) March 3, 2011 - Microsoft's billionaire co-founder Bill Gates on Thursday warned that US state politicians are pitting young against old in their heated budget battles. Politicians are dooming the young by using obvious gimmicks to avoid dealing with soaring pension and health care costs for state employees, Gates said at a prestigious TED conference in the Southern California city of Long Beach. "This is so blatant," Gates said while comparing state budget handlers to corrupt corporate executives. "Is anyone paying attention to what these guys do?"

Politicians borrow recklessly, postpone payments, and sell off assets to shove the problem into the future, according to Gates, who devoted himself to philanthropy after retiring from Microsoft. Schools are paying the price as tight budgets result in cuts in funding to education, one of Gates's passions. "It really is this young versus old," Gates said of the budget trade-offs. "Education will be cut to pay for pensions and health care." He gave the example of budgets being slashed and tuitions hiked in California's prestigious public university system.

Gates said state leaders have shown that when it comes to managing money and watching out for educating the children that will define the future, there "is no brain trust." "I'm just very worried about the investments we make for kids' education and what that means for the future," he said. "It's going to take voters to really look at that," he added. "Without that, the default course -- where the health care costs are squeezing out education -- is quite bleak." Gates said technology such as online course have a role to play in the future of education, but it takes money to pay for such innovations.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 3, 2011
China, the world's biggest polluter, plans to "go green" in the next five years, emphasising energy efficiency and the battle on its choking pollution in its plans to revamp the economy, experts say.

The so-called 12th five-year plan -- already approved by Communist Party leaders -- is expected to be reviewed and rubber-stamped by delegates to the National People's Congress, which opens its annual session Saturday in Beijing.

"We must not any longer sacrifice the environment for the sake of rapid growth and reckless roll-outs," Premier Wen Jiabao said Sunday, warning that doing so would result in unsustainable growth and the depletion of resources.

China's total carbon dioxide emissions, which it finally admitted last year are the largest in the world, increased by 32.5 percent between 2006 and 2009, according to the US Energy Information Administration, a government agency.

Beijing has already launched an ambitious programme to develop clean energy and shut down factories that fail to meet emissions targets.

It also wants to reduce its energy consumption per unit of GDP, or carbon intensity, by 40 to 45 percent by 2020 based on 2005 levels -- essentially a vow of greater energy efficiency, but not an absolute cap on emissions.

According to consultants APCO Worldwide, which specialise in government policy, the government's new economic blueprint could include new carbon emission goals to push the process forward.

"I think this plan is greener than the last," Roger Somerville, a Beijing-based APCO expert, told AFP.

"It's not so much that the Chinese government has become a Greenpeace supporter, but... they are trying to change what they can do to generate economic growth," he added.

"They are looking at things like a low-carbon economy and they are seeing... the creation of high-value jobs and economic growth in the future," he said, pointing to strong Chinese investment in the solar and wind power sectors.

Yolanda Fernandez Lommen, chief economist at the Asian Development Bank in Beijing, also highlighted plans to restructure the economy, focusing more on services "whose carbon footprint is much smaller" and job growth is strong.

A carbon tax, however, is not expected to be included in the new five-year plan. Officials have recently hinted that such a tax would only be launched around 2013, according to APCO.

Jiang Kejun, a researcher at China's Energy Research Institute -- which is linked to the country's top economic planning agency, the National Development and Reform Commission -- said the tax was being discussed.

"It will still take some time. It's a concrete measure that can only be implemented after an in-depth debate," Jiang told AFP.

"At the most, the plan will announce there will be economic and fiscal measures to promote energy savings and reduce emissions. But it will not elaborate on what sort of taxes there will be."

The government also wants to step up its fight against pollution, which is threatening the health of China's 1.34 billion people on a daily basis after 30 years of rapid industrialisation.

On Monday, the country's minister of environmental protection, Zhou Shengxian, warned that pollution-related public health scares had put social stability -- a key concern of the government -- at risk.

"In China's thousands of years of civilisation, the conflict between humankind and nature has never been as serious as it is today," Zhou said in an essay on the ministry's website.

The China Daily newspaper reported that the government has set a target of reducing emissions of lead, mercury, chromium, cadmium and arsenic by 15 percent from 2007 levels over the next five years.

Since 2009, 30 major poisoning incidents have occurred in China, sparking widespread concern.

The nation's environmental protection ministry has also added nitrogen oxide to a list of major pollutants that it wants reduced by 1.5 percent this year.

Experts say the five-year plan could also put in place a limit on the production of coal, which provides China with more than two-thirds of its energy and is highly polluting.







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