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About NRDC: Annual Report
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With more than a decade of experience on the ground in China, NRDC is uniquely positioned to help solve the nation's most pressing environmental problems. And with estimates that global warming pollution from China is about equal to that of the United States and that 36 percent of total mercury in the United States comes from China, our common environmental fate has never been clearer.Working out of the NRDC international office in Beijing, our staff continues to build partnerships across provinces and across the globe, pursuing shared solutions to our shared challenges.
Improving the Energy
Efficiency of Chinese-
Made Products
With Chinese manufacturers dominating
many world markets, improvements
in the energy efficiency of products
made in China can deliver benefits in
the United States and across the globe.
For example, more than 75 percent
of external power supplies -- those
black boxes used to convert incoming
AC power to the DC power needed
by electronics -- are manufactured in
China. Unfortunately, most of these
power supplies are relatively inefficient;
NRDC estimates that the United States
could reduce its electricity consumption
by 1 percent to 2 percent simply
by moving to more efficient power
supplies.
Working on the first-ever joint project between the United States and China to coordinate the testing methods and performance measures for a product, we helped establish a single worldwide specification for external power supplies that has been adopted on a voluntary basis in China, Australia, and the United States. In the next few years, this specification will become mandatory for all external power supplies sold in China.
Spurring a Shift to
Greener Buildings
NRDC was the first international
environmental organization to establish
a clean energy program in China,
and over the last decade, our team of
experts has helped China develop clean,
efficient, and affordable environmental
strategies. This year, NRDC's eightyear
partnership with the Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory led to the
development of China's first national
commercial building energy-efficiency
standard, which will require all new
commercial buildings to cut energy
use by 50 percent. We're also making
sure that residential buildings meet
aggressive environmental benchmarks
by setting energy standards for two
of China's three major climate zones:
the Transition Zone, which covers the
entire Yangtze River Basin, and the
southern Cooling Zone, which includes
Guangdong Province [Canton], China's
fastest-growing economic region. And
because we know that setting standards
is only half the battle, NRDC is working
with Shanghai- and U.S.-based partners
to ensure that these groundbreaking
standards are properly implemented.
Promoting Energy-
Saving Technologies
The cheapest, easiest, and fastest way
to reduce the staggering pollution from
China's power plants is to increase
energy efficiency. That's why NRDC
and the China-U.S. Energy Efficiency
Alliance are working to develop
incentive programs, known as demand
side management (DSM), that will help
China improve its efficiency. We helped
organize the first DSM forum in China,
bringing together representatives from
national and provincial government
agencies and utilities to discuss energysaving
opportunities. Research shows
that DSM programs -- which allow
utilities to use a portion of their revenues
for rebates and other incentives to
encourage customers to take advantage
of energy efficiency -- could meet up
to half of China's forecast load growth
over the next decade. Moreover, these
efficiency "negawatts" can be deployed
rapidly and typically cost one-quarter
to one-half as much as investments in
traditional power supplies.
Pushing for Cleaner Cars
Private car sales have been surging
in China, leading to increased global
warming pollution from emissions and
greater oil dependency for the nation.
NRDC has been making sure that more
cars on the road doesn't come at a steep
environmental cost. In Shanghai, we
have successfully encouraged the formation
of a public-private partnership
for clean vehicle commercialization,
a relatively new concept for China. The
founding members of the partnership
include Chinese subsidiaries of major
multinational automakers, as well
as Chinese companies and academic
institutions. Formally launched in
October, this nonprofit partnership is
already hard at work organizing forums
and seminars, supporting college
students conducting an energy policy
research project, and building China's
first hydrogen fueling demonstration
station in Shanghai.
Strengthening the Law
and Increasing Public
Participation
In 2007, the Chinese government began
developing an overarching energy law
that will provide the foundation for more
specific energy laws and regulations.
Recognizing this unique opportunity for
promoting sustainable energy policies
in China, NRDC teamed up with the
China Sustainable Energy Program of
the Energy Foundation and the Law
School of China's Tsinghua University
to provide recommendations for this
groundbreaking law. Encouragingly, the
draft version of the China Energy Law
released in December 2007 has given
energy conservation and efficiency the
highest priority and included general
provisions on low-carbon fuels, renewable
energy, and public participation in
energy decision making.
To encourage and empower the public to claim its place in the movement, our staff in Beijing -- including Jingjing Zhang, dubbed the "Erin Brockovich of China" by the Atlanta Journal- Constitution -- is working with local partners to conduct legal training for NGOs, community groups, and journalists. This year, we also helped develop and launch China's first online resource devoted to environmental public participation (www.greenlaw. org.cn). The website arms citizens with how-to guides to getting involved, along with localized information about their region's environmental initiatives.
See the complete China section of this report (in pdf format, 372k) for more about our work, including photos of Beijing pollution.
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