China has finished drafting more than half of the 12
regulations that will be used to implement the landmark
renewable-energy law enacted last year, a senior government
official said on Tuesday.
"Work on seven to eight rules is done," said Xu
Dingming, deputy director-general of the Office of the National
Energy Leading Group, which is in charge of China's energy strategy
and policies.
Xu made the comments in Shanghai at an energy
conference organized by the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
The official declined to specify which rules were
finished or provide a schedule for when the entire job would be
done.
The government earlier announced it would issue a
dozen specific regulations ranging from pricing to preferential
policies to standardize and develop the fledging renewable energy
sector.
The country wants renewable sources such as sunlight,
wind, and water to account for 16 percent of its energy supply by
2020, and increase from the current ratio of 7 percent.
China will invest US$193
billion between 2000 and 2020 on the development of clean energy,
according to industry consultancy and investment agency Azure
International.
The sector's growth potential has drawn huge
investment interest from sources such as venture capital firms and
the public capital market following the initial public offering of
China's Suntech Power Holdings Co in the United States in
2005.
But at present, the market for solar companies is
mostly in Western countries where some governments subsidize
renewable-energy projects to offset their higher costs.
Although China published its renewable-energy law last
year, many questions remain concerning its implementation. For
example, the foundation for pricing and cost sharing is established
in the law, but the mechanisms to carry out those measures won't be
known until the supplementary rules are issued.
There may also be too much funding directed to the
solar energy sector as more capacity has come on line in the past
year, driven by Suntech's success, a venture capital partner
said.
"VCs may now shift to other renewables like biomass
and biofuels," said Don Ye, president of Beijing-based Tsing
Capital, which has invested in two solar-related firms that later
went public and has another two in pipeline.
(Shanghai
Daily April 4, 2007)
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