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China urged to put environment first

By Zheng Jinran (China Daily) Updated: 2015-06-17 07:49

Future holds rich opportunities for cooperation between the two countries, says German official

China urged to put environment first
China needs to put the environment at the center of its coming 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-2020) and fully implement existing laws and regulations to control pollution, according to a senior German environmental official.

China and Germany have great potential for cooperation on broad environmental issues, said Jochen Flasbarth, state secretary of the German federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety.

"We have many ongoing cooperation programs," he said. "Environmental protection in the areas of air, soil, water or waste management, as well as climate protection, are priorities within our bilateral cooperation."

Cooperation with China is intensive. The German International Climate Initiative has already commissioned 32 bilateral projects costing 74.1 million euros ($83.1 million), he said.

Flasbarth made the remarks at the International Advisory Meeting on the Environment and Development for China's 13th Five-Year Plan, which was held from June 8 to 10 in Beijing.

Meeting with Vice-Premier Zhang Gaoli on Tuesday, Flasbarth said China should place the environment at the center, not at the margins, of the Five-Year Plan - a priority Zhang endorsed, adding that it's not something China can neglect.

The plan, which serves as a road map for the country's social and economic development, is currently being drafted. It will include a chapter devoted to details of ecological growth and will set metrics for how to reach specific goals in ecological development, said Yang Chunping, a member of a think tank of the National Development and Reform Commission, the national economic planner.

Germany experienced severe pollution in the 1960s and 70s, "when you could see, feel, smell and taste it", Flasbarth said, adding that it took 20 years to significantly reduce pollution in the air and water.

During the effort, Germany realized it's better to design the whole process so that industrial pollution does not appear in the first place, rather than trying to manage emissions at the end of the process, he said. To accomplish that, the country invested in technology and innovation.

China is confronted with serious pollution that has come with rapid economic growth, and the two countries can share and cooperate on a large scale, according to officials and companies on both sides.

A formal strategic environmental dialogue was created in 2006 between German and Chinese environmental protection authorities. Last year, Chancellor Angela Merkel and Premier Li Keqiang agreed to expand environmental cooperation.

Flasbarth said Germany's environmental minister will accompany him on a visit to China in November. Also, the countries will convene next year for the fifth German-Chinese environmental forum - "indicating smooth cooperation," he said.

An environmental conference at the German embassy in April was part of the effort. About 60 companies, half of them German and half Chinese, brought 150 participants together with officials and researchers, according to the Mercator Institute for China Studies, one of the organizers.

German Ambassador to China Michael Clauss said his country is the global market leader in climate and environmental technologies.

"There is a lot more we can do in the future. Germany and its companies are ready to get involved," Clauss said.

Contact the writer at zhengjinran@chinadaily.com.cn

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