South China's Guangdong Province and Hong Kong are planning to
cooperate on cross-border emissions trading, according to the
Guangdong Provincial Environmental Protection Bureau.
An effort by both sides to clean up the skies above the Pearl
River Delta region, the trading scheme is high on agenda to be
discussed at the ninth Guangdong-Hong Kong Co-operation Joint
Conference, which opens today in Guangzhou, capital of the
province.
"Under the scheme, governments will sell emission quotas, or
rights to emit a specific amount, to polluters," said Li Qing,
director of the Guangdong provincial environmental watchdog.
Enterprises, especially power plants whose emissions fall under
their quota, could sell the surplus to others who exceed their
limit, according to Li.
The scheme would allow Hong Kong companies to save on their own
emissions-reduction bills by buying quotas from their counterparts
in Guangdong.
The overall aim is to create incentives for polluters to cut
down on their emissions and clean up the environment.
However, Li said that they haven't decided a timetable for the
implementation of the scheme as it involves many issues such as
constructing a regulation and monitoring system across the two
regions.
"We have worked out a proposal for emissions-trading and we are
waiting for approval by relevant governmental organizations," Li
said.
Once it is approved, the scheme will be recommended to some
pilot power plants.
"And finally it will be implemented across the Pearl River Delta
areas if it is a success," Li said.
The State Environmental Protection Administration announced an
emissions-trading scheme involving seven pilot areas as an example
of effective "free market environmentalism."
Li said that Guangdong also plans to offer subsidies to power
plants in the region to install devices to remove sulphur from flue
gas.
At present, only 18 per cent of factories in the region are
fitted with the equipment, which has helped reduced emissions by up
to 200,000 tons a year.
Besides the emissions-trading scheme, other environmental
protection issues are also on agenda for the meeting, which will be
attended by Hong Kong Chief Executive Donald Tsang, who arrived in
the city yesterday.
Guangdong and Hong Kong have increased environmental protection
cooperation over the past few years.
For example, a network to monitor air pollution in the Pearl
River Delta region was jointly set up last year, and information
about air quality is released to the public through the network
every day.
(China Daily August 2, 2006)