The Shift to Synergies in China’s Climate Planning: Aligning Goals with Policies and Institutions

Author:

Cai Qianyi1ORCID,Zusman Eric23,Meng Guobi4

Affiliation:

1. Institute of International Law, Wuhan University, Bayi Road 299, Wuhan 430072, China

2. The Institute for Global Environmental Strategies, Kamiyamaguchi, Hayama 240-0115, Kanagawa, Japan

3. National Institute for Environmental Studies, Onogawa 16-2, Tsukuba 305-8506, Ibaraki, Japan

4. School of Law, Guangdong University of Finance and Economics, Luntou Road 21, Guangzhou 510320, China

Abstract

China has long sought to address climate change in line with other development goals. However, research supporting this alignment often employs data-driven models that downplay the policies and institutions needed to achieve the multiple benefits that studies feature in their analyses. This oversight is troubling because it neglects gaps between goals and the actual integration of climate and development or co-control of air pollution and greenhouse gases (GHGs). Additionally, this oversight may overlook growing implementation challenges as China pursues synergies between net-zero emissions, biodiversity, and circularity. This article illustrates these challenges by tracing the goals and policies/institutions in China over three phases: (1) integration (1979–2010), (2) co-control (2011–2019), and (3) synergies (2020–present). This article argues that China needs to strengthen the science–policy interface and ensure that new market-based policy instruments (such as emissions trading programs) as well as the leadership responsibility system incentivize reductions in overall GHG emissions while shrinking ecological footprints in the shifts to synergies.

Funder

Ministry of Education of the People’s Republic of China

Ministry of Environment of Japan

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference55 articles.

1. Brundtland Commission (1987). Our Common Future: Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development, Oxford University Press.

2. United Nations (2023, May 09). United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Available online: https://unfccc.int/resource/docs/convkp/conveng.pdf.

3. Pearce, D. (2000). Policy Frameworks for the Ancillary Benefits of Climate Policies, Centre for Social and Economic Research on the Global Environment.

4. Barker, T., and Rosendahl, K.E. (2000). Ancillary Benefits of GHG Mitigation in Europe: SO2, NOX and PM10 Reductions from Policies to Meet KYOTO Targets Using the E3ME Model and External Valuations, OECD.

5. Research on the Road map of Traditional Industrial Parks to Achieve Carbon Peak and Neutrality Goals;Zhou;J. Beijing Inst. Technol.,2022

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