A report submitted to the China’s parliament reveals the country is struggling to meet its 2011-2015 targets to reduce pollution, cut greenhouse gas growth and introduce cleaner sources of energy.
The report, which covers the 2011-2012 period, said faster-than-expected economic growth was to blame for China’s failure to meet environmental targets ranging from energy use to nitrogen oxide emissions.
Reuters Newsagency reports the state of China’s environment has come into particular focus in 2013, with most major cities engulfed by hazardous smog during the course of the year, including Beijing in January and Shanghai earlier in November.
Desperate to head off growing public anger about the state of the country’s air, water and soil, the Chinese government has promised to put an end to its “growth at all costs” economic model.
Reuters reports it has already introduced new policies aimed at reining in polluting industries, cutting coal use and thinning traffic.
However, the official Xinhua news agency reported the government document said China was already playing catch-up.
China wants energy intensity, the amount of energy consumed per unit of gross domestic product (GDP), to fall by 16 per cent over 2011-2015.
However, it had dropped by just 5.54 per cent by the end of last year.
Efforts to reduce the amount of carbon emissions per unit of GDP by 17 per cent over the same period were also behind schedule, with the actual decline over 2011-2012 standing at just 6.6 per cent.
Reuters reports China also aims to raise the share of non-fossil fuels in its total primary energy mix to 11.4 per cent over the 2011-2015 period.
However, it had reached just 9.4 per cent by the end of last year, up only 0.8 percentage points since 2010.
The slow progress made over 2011-2012 could put additional pressure on local governments to implement tougher measures against polluters, and even shut down energy-intensive industries like steel or cement.
At the end of 2010, northern China’s Hebei and several other provinces ordered dozens of steel mills to close down in a last-ditch attempt to meet a binding 2006-2010 energy intensity target.
Last month, several steel production facilities were temporarily closed in Hebei in order to cut pollution, and more closures are expected





