3. The 2000’s growth spurt was not expected, nor was the 2010’s slowdown. What next for China?
Bunker fuels are used for international transport is 3.1% of global emissions.
Statistical differences are between the global estimates and sum of national totals is 1.2% of global emissions.
Source: CDIAC; Le Quéré et al 2016; Global Carbon Budget 2016
Top emitters: fossil fuels & industry
4. Chinese per-capita emissions have also grown, and they now exceed the world average and the EU28
Source: CDIAC; Le Quéré et al 2016; Global Carbon Budget 2016
Top emitters: fossil fuels & industry
6. Coal dominates the Chinese energy system. Oil and gas are growing strongly.
Increasing growth in non-fossil sources, dominated by hydro, with nuclear, solar, and wind having a small share.
Source: BP 2016; Jackson et al 2015; Global Carbon Budget 2016
Energy consumption by energy type
7. The annual increase in energy consumption (black) has declined, mainly since less growth in coal use (green)
Renewables have grown strongly, but the slowdown in energy use makes this look more impressive!
All data is smoothed with a 10 year window
Source: Peters et al 2017
What is the marginal energy source?
8. CO2 emissions growth (back) slowing in China due to:
Slow energy growth (purple), with help from renewables (orange) & cleaner fossils (green)
All data is smoothed with a 10 year window
Source: Peters et al 2017
Drivers of CO2 emissions growth
9. Energy consumption growth (back) slowing in China due to:
Weaker economic growth (green), tempered by slow efficiency improvements (purple)
All data is smoothed with a 10 year window
Source: Peters et al 2017
Drivers of energy consumption growth
10. About three-quarters of the drop in China’s overall coal use can be attributed to drop in construction.
Air pollution concerns and renewables contribute, but by no means dominated.
Source: Brad Plumer (Vox, 6/03/2016)
The role of energy intensive products
11. Chinese exported-driven growth in the 2000’s (orange) allowed developed countries to grow without the emissions.
Since the Global Financial Crisis, export-drive growth has slowed, so has the net import into developed countries.
Source: Peters et al (2011); CDIAC; Le Quéré et al 2016; Global Carbon Budget 2016
Slowdown in CO2 emissions exported
13. Chinese emissions have most likely been flat since 2013, a significant change from the 2000’s.
Will this trend continue?
Source: BP, NBS, IEA, and own calculations, see Le Quéré et al 2016
Have emissions peaked already?
14. When will Chinese CO2 emissions peak?
The President said before 2030
No, when do you think emissions will peak?
We normally follow what the President says…
When will Chinese CO2 emissions peak?
15. Targets which are interrelated
• Peak CO2 emissions by 2030
• Decrease carbon intensity -60% to -65% below 2005 by
2030
• Increase non-fossil share of energy to 20% in 2030
Additional target
• Increase forest stock 4.5 billion m3 by 2030
China’s emission pledge (NDC)
16. Targets imply a 3-4%/yr decrease in carbon intensity (CO2/GDP)
CO2 will peak when GDP growth drops below carbon intensity decline (2025-2030)
Source: Peters et al 2015; Global Carbon Budget 2016
Emission intensity target
Earlier peak in emissions:
• Either, GDP growth slower
• Or, CO2/GDP declines faster
17. With mid-range GDP growth & if China follows the historic trend in emission intensity, then…
…emissions will peak 2025-2030 (that is, intensity and peak pledge consistent)
Source: Peters et al 2015; Global Carbon Budget 2016
Emission pledge embeds more growth
Grey region is where Chinese
emissions needs to go if the world
is to stay below 2°C
18. If growth in non-fossil energy continues, as expected, target should be achievable
(note, this figure has not been updated since the third economic census)
Source: Various sources, own calculations
Increase non-fossil share to 20% in 2030
20. A major dip in coal consumption around 2000 turned out to be underreporting of small coal mines.
The current Chinese “crackdown” may have similar led to underreporting?
Source: BP (Multiple Years) and based on NBS data, with own calculations
Can the data be trusted?
21. The growth in coal consumption by mass can be very different to energy, since coal quality can improve.
The large reported drops in coal consumption by mass are offset by improved quality (or data errors).
Source: BP (2016), with own calculations
Don’t confuse mass with energy
23. • Chinese CO2 emissions grew unexpectedly rapidly during the
2000’s, and the growth unexpectedly stopped after 2010
– Mainly economic factors (energy-intensive production, hence coal)
– Energy efficiency improved, returning to longer term declines after a
slowdown in the 2000’s
– Non-fossil energy sources growing fast, but from low levels
– Air pollution concerns no doubt contributed, but not dominant
• Is there an early peak in CO2 emissions?
– Coal power plants are still there, just running less of the time
– Peak important, but emissions need to decline as fast as they inclined
Key messages
CHINA: Coal consumption much lower growth since 2011, last two years (2014 and 2015) with negative growth. Cement down in 2015. China 2016 growth rates: Total -0.5%. Coal -1.8%, Oil 4.0%, Gas 7.2%, Cement 2.6%. 10 year trend 4.4%/yr.
USA: Coal down in 2015 and 2016, following longer term trend though large annual variability. Oil, Gas up. USA 2016 growth rates: Total -1.7%, Coal -8.5%, Oil 1.0%, Gas 2.0%, Cement 1.9%. 10 year trend -1.3%/yr.
EU28: In 2015 up primarily due to increases oil and gas consumption. Longer term trend down. No estimate for 2016. 10 year trend -2.4%/yr.
INDIA: 10 year grown of around 6%/yr, 2015 up 5% due to slightly lower growth in coal but larger growth in oil. No estimate for 2016.