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CARNEGIE
ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE: FINANCING ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN CHINA by
WILLIAM CHANDLER: 10/12/2007 (MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network /
- 10 December 2007 -- As
delegates in Bali struggle to agree on a climate change treaty, a new report
from the Carnegie Endowment argues that reforming China's financial sector can
curb China's greenhouse gas emissions even as work continues on an international
treaty. China's impressive national policies to promote clean and renewable
energy have been undermined by unnecessary financial hurdles and bureaucratic
struggles that increase financial risks and costs for potential investors.
In Financing
Energy Efficiency in China, leading climate expert and
Carnegie Senior Associate William Chandler argues that restrictions on debt
financing and foreign equity investment, unfavorable tax policies, and even the
United Nations' emissions trading system all discourage foreign investment in
clean energy in China.
Chandler
concludes that to encourage investment in clean energy, China should:
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Exempt
clean energy investments from foreign exchange, foreign-invested enterprise,
and industrial policy controls;
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provide
tax exemptions for clean energy companies and services—particularly in
regards to the value added tax (VAT), which sucks up 17 percent of total
revenues;
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make
risk-based clean energy lending more worthwhile for banks;
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provide
loan guarantees for energy-efficiency projects in China;
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reduce
required paperwork for clean energy investment; and
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address
restrictions created through the emissions trading system that actually
increase risk to investors.
“Removing
barriers to clean energy investment in China is an essential step toward climate
protection. The incentives and rules of a global climate treaty will be blunted
and frustrated by distortions of the world's largest potential clean energy
marketplace unless policy makers recognize and deal with the realities of that
market,” argues Chandler.
NOTES
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Direct
link to the PDF: www.carnegieendowment.org/files/clean_energy_final1.pdf
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William
Chandler is a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment and
director of the Energy and Climate Program. Chandler has spent over 35
years working in energy and environmental policy and was a lead author for
the Nobel Prize winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. He
is president of Transition Energy, co-founder of DEED China, and founder and
former director of Advanced International Studies at the Joint Global Change
Research Institute. Chandler received the 1992 Champion of Energy-Efficiency
Award from the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy for his
work. In 1999, he received the first Global Climate Leadership Award from
the International Energy Agency. He has authored or co-authored ten books
which have been favorably reviewed by scholarly and popular critics and
translated into several foreign languages.
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The Carnegie
Energy and Climate Program aims to provide leadership in global
energy and climate policy. The program integrates thinking on energy
technology, environmental science, and political economy to reduce risks
stemming from global change and competition for scarce resources. It will
create new products and collaborate with Carnegie experts around the world
to provide information and change the way policy makers think about energy
policy.
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Press
Contact: Trent Perrotto, 212/939-2372, tperrotto@ceip.org
Labels: United
Nations, U.N., Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, William
Chandler, China, Clean
Energy Development, Financing
Energy Efficiency in China
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