The government's think-tank and the World Bank have both
recommended China to set up a cabinet ministry to oversee energy
security.
The Development Research Center of the State Council and the
bank made the recommendation yesterday in a bid to improve energy
co-ordination and supervision, and meet the challenges ahead.
They listed China's energy challenges as soaring consumption,
the impact on the environment, an inefficient decision-making
process, poor efficiency and growing exposure to the global
market.
"While considering reform in the energy sector, we strongly
recommend that consideration be given to re-establishing a Ministry
of Energy," the report, published by the two organizations
yesterday, said.
The recommendation follows the central government setting up a
vice-ministry-level energy office last year, following its
dismantling of the Ministry of Energy in 1993, and the setting up
of the Energy Bureau in 2003.
Facing China's huge changes in the energy sector, the
Development Research Center concluded that re-establishing an
energy ministry is an urgent task.
The report, which took two years of research, also suggests
creating a regulatory body for natural gas management.
It also calls for government agencies to be pushed to boost
energy efficiency and technological innovation.
"China's energy sector needs a coordinated policy," said Xie
Fuzhan, vice-president of the center at a seminar to discuss the
report yesterday.
Feng Fei, department director of the center, warned that China's
growing oil dependence and electricity shortage pose a risk to the
nation's sustained economic growth.
According to the World Bank and the center, at least half and
perhaps as much as two-thirds of China's oil will have to be
imported by 2020.
By then the county's annual oil demand is expected to be between
450 and 610 million tons.
Domestic oil output is expected to peak at about 200 million
tons in 2015. A similar high level of oil dependence has been
reached in most industrialized countries, with imports needed to
fuel growth.
But the organizations warned that the oil market is going
through important changes and future prices are likely to be far
higher.
"In a high oil price era, high dependency will make us
vulnerable if we cannot take measures to address the insecurity,"
said Feng.
Meanwhile the National Development and Reform Commission said
there is tremendous potential for energy conservation in China, and
that the country can be fed almost entirely with domestically
produced energy.
"China still has great potential in domestic energy supply,"
said Zhang Guobao, vice-minister of the commission, at an energy
forum last week.
He said China has abundant coal resources and there is the
possibility that big oil and gas fields may yet be discovered. He
also stressed the potential of China's hydropower, nuclear power,
wind power and other new resources.
Zhang said coal gas and renewable energy sources such as biomass
and solar power are expected to become "major alternatives."
(China Daily June 2, 2006)
|