Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan called on civil servants in the
central Government departments to put aside their smart formal
suits and put on casual outer wears on most occasions during office
hours in a bid to save more power and energy.
"It has been a very good move for civil servants to dress casual
other than on some very important occasions," Zeng told a meeting
on energy conservation efforts of government bodies held on Monday.
"This initiative should be continued."
Zeng said air-conditioning units in office buildings should
continue to be set no cooler than 26 degrees Celsius in summer, and
no warmer than 20 degrees Celsius in winter.
Even at some high-profil political events, top Chinese leaders,
including President Hu Jintao, were once pictured wearing
open-necked shirts with short sleeves, rather than their normal
jackets and ties when attending a key conference on June 25 of this
year.
They were trying to set an example for all the office workers to
dress in light, casual clothing in summer in order to reduce the
use of air conditioners.
Zeng also urged that more energy-saving and environment-friendly
products should be included in government procurement lists, to
serve as a guiding hand to see more of such products purchased in
the whole society.
He asked government institutions to buy more energy-saving cars
for official use, and cut the number of cars in use as many as
possible.
It could also benefit a lot if more energy-saving technologies
were applied in renovation and construction of office buildings,
Zeng said.
He also called on government departments to make working
conferences shorter and promote water-saving facilities to the end
of energy conservation.
In 2006, China's central government departments saw the
consumption of electricity per person drop 12 percent and
consumption of water fall 19 percent, with the overall energy
consumption per person down six percent.
Government institutions across the country aimed to lower energy
consumption per unit of office building and per person both by more
than 20 percent in 2010, down from the level in 2005.
(Xinhua News Agency December 25, 2007)