Redian新闻
>
Why the Private Sector Is Key To China's Net Zero Plans

Why the Private Sector Is Key To China's Net Zero Plans

社会

Private firms helped power the country’s green transition. Now some worry about their place in China’s future.

China has spent the last decade transforming itself into a global leader in low-carbon technology, from batteries to wind and solar generation. Although its success in these sectors is often attributed to top-down planning, in which a powerful state sets goals to be carried out by a mix of bureaucrats and state-owned enterprises, many of the country’s most important green tech advances were in fact made by private companies.

China’s traditional energy sector is dominated by state-owned companies, which are tightly monitored and managed by the government. When it comes to national policy, whether China’s climate goals or its poverty alleviation campaign, these SOEs are the state’s preferred instruments of action, a way for it to exert influence over society. Entrance into key sectors of the economy, including traditional energy generation, is gatekept; in government documents and policies, private energy firms are mostly discussed as targets of regulation, rather than potential allies.

While this approach has allowed China to largely ensure the stability, efficiency, and affordability of energy, it is not always efficient. State-owned energy firms are under intense pressure to juggle the needs of consumers with national directives on environmental protection, climate change mitigation, and employment stability. Despite their dominant market position, many state-owned coal firms, for example, run at a loss.

Meanwhile, the potential of the private sector has gone overlooked by policymakers, who see private firms as less reliable partners in the fight against climate change than SOEs.

Yet it was private companies, and not SOEs, that initially drove the reduction of emissions in China. Prior to China’s 2020 carbon neutrality pledge, private firms consistently led the nation in developing solar and wind energy resources: As recently as 2018, the private sector accounted for 67% of wind and solar energy investment.

Their success wasn’t limited to China, either. Chinese private firms have become leading suppliers of solar panels, wind turbines, and electric car batteries to countries around the world. In 2021, China surpassed the European Union to become the global leader in green energy exports. In 2022, Chinese solar exports grew by 68%, lithium battery exports by 87%, and electric cars by nearly 132%.

Like producers elsewhere, private firms initially benefitted from generous government subsidies. But even after China phased out its national solar subsidies in 2021, market demand has continued to drive growth. And as private companies dive into international markets, competition is pushing them to continually invest in and develop new products.

These aren’t the only reasons for private companies’ success in the renewables sector. Whereas SOEs rely on government funding to build massive solar and wind power bases, private firms have developed smaller, more flexible projects, including regional wind power networks or rooftop solar. The International Energy Agency notes that these distributed energy systems improve the stability and efficiency of energy supplies while protecting the environment.

Traditional energy firms treat companies and the public as end consumers. In new energy systems, the public and companies have the ability to produce energy in addition to consuming it. Projects in this sector are smaller in scale and require intensive management, giving more nimble private firms a leg up on their state-owned peers.

But China’s “dual carbon” initiatives — key to its goal of achieving net zero emissions by 2060 — prioritize state-owned companies in terms of funds, technology, and other support, while private companies get the short end of the stick. In all types of renewables initiatives and at all levels of government, officials have shown a clear preference for cooperating with state-owned companies over private firms, according to a recent report from China Energy News. The outlet found that almost 90% of government new energy contracts were handed to state-owned companies in 2022.

Large-scale wind and solar initiatives in China are increasingly dominated by state-owned companies. Once at the forefront of the industry, private companies now merely follow the lead of SOEs. Thanks to their considerable financial advantages, including preferential access to financing, state-owned companies have acquired wind and solar power stations from private companies, many of whom were forced to sell their assets when the central government withdrew its subsidies. A number of private companies complain that they are now totally reliant on collaborations with state-owned partners.

All this comes as countries in Europe and North America are adopting new protectionist industrial policies in support of homegrown producers. Although the full effect of these policies is far from clear, they potentially threaten Chinese firms’ overseas sales.

Private firms hold the key to China’s energy revolution. China should make it less costly for them to succeed by allowing them to take part in national initiatives in wind and solar, energy storage, and green hydrogen. Only by placing private companies on an equal footing with state-owned enterprises can we reach our climate governance and market reform goals.

Sheng Chunhong is a researcher of public affairs at Shanghai International Studies University.
Translator: Lewis Wright; editor: Cai Yiwen; portrait artist: Wang Zhenhao.
(Header image: A rooftop solar power installation in Ankang, Shaanxi province, Feb. 15, 2023. VCG)


Download the new Sixth Tone app at the App Store or Google Play
APK file for Android:
https://image4.sixthtone.com/pkg/sixthtone.apk
(Copy URL and open in browser)

微信扫码关注该文公众号作者

戳这里提交新闻线索和高质量文章给我们。
相关阅读
[Webinar] Navigating China's Asset Securitization MarketiPhone 8 Plus white 256g battery health 100%Chinese Man Uses ChatGPT To Create Fake News, ArrestedAt Global Tech Meet, Firms Tackle Job Disruptions in the AI EraKeychron 推出 K14 Pro 双模客制化机械键盘:自研 K Pro 轴、支持热插拔,418 元起Campers 有up to 40% off private sale 了,凉鞋款式很多PKU Student Who Killed Mother Has Death Sentence UpheldChinese Journalist Beaten While Investigating Teachers’ DeathsJiangsu City Punishes Property Developers For Selling CheaplyChinese Office Workers Plagued by Bad Gastro Health: Survey【城事】巴黎市长将重修Châtelet 广场以方便行人He Wrote the Book on Rural China. But First, He Wrote a Novel.The Father-Son Duo Winning Over China’s Marathon Scene开篇‘The Phantom of the Opera’ is Here — in ChineseHurun China Metaverse Companies with the Greatest Potential 2023被点名了!Asian American Conservatives Have Become Key Allies ofFor Cheap Meals, China’s Grown-Ups Take a Seat at the Kids Table丘陵地带的一座乡村小城镇Chinese Netizens Celebrate ‘WeChat Overtime’ Court RulingFor Young Chinese, 2023 Is the Year of the ‘Drifter’[歪解] where's the remote?The Astronomer Who Calmed China’s UFO Craze巴黎市长将重修Châtelet 广场以方便行人憨老头吐槽Agustín Hernández:中美洲建筑背景下的未来主义巨构China financed the American Revolution《西線無戰事》拍出戰火浮生錄Why China’s Truckers See Power in NumbersIn 2023, Young Chinese Have a New Life Plan: Win the LotteryAfter Exposé, Chinese Firm Under Lens For Hiding Mining DeathsReverse Alchemy: The Chinese Emperor Who Turned Silver Into TinTimes Square Billboard Attracts Chinese Attention Seekers马克谈天下(371) 我看TIKTOK在美国的可能命运Changshu to Pay State Sector Workers With Digital Yuan【吐槽大会】暖场:南京方言说唱《Why did we come here?》(原创)Tech Addiction Leaves China’s Rural Youth Wired for Distraction驾驭商业世界:What They Don't Teach You at Harvard Business SchoolChina's Powerstar CPU Seemingly 'Confirmed' as Intel SiliconChinese Gamers Brace for Adventure as the New Zelda Hits Shelves
logo
联系我们隐私协议©2024 redian.news
Redian新闻
Redian.news刊载任何文章,不代表同意其说法或描述,仅为提供更多信息,也不构成任何建议。文章信息的合法性及真实性由其作者负责,与Redian.news及其运营公司无关。欢迎投稿,如发现稿件侵权,或作者不愿在本网发表文章,请版权拥有者通知本网处理。