Chapter 1
Exploring the Road to Carbon Neutrality
Abstract How to deal with carbon emissions—a rare externality that spans a large
time frame and geographical scope—is a difficult task for the world. This task
is particularly challenging for China, mainly in that the country must coordinate
dual objectives, including existing economic growth targets and the newly added
carbon neutrality goal. Over the past 40 years of reform and opening up, China has
been setting economic growth targets and striving to achieve them. In recent years,
although growth targets have softened along with the secular decline in potential
growth rate, economic growth remains a top priority for China, the world’s largest
developing country. We expect China to reach the current standard for a high-income
country by the end of the 14th Five-Year Plan period, and to double its GDP or per
capita income by 2035. Currently, China is adding a new constraint over the next
40 years. As the world’s largest carbon emitter, China has set out a clear timetable
for carbon neutrality—to reduce its carbon emission intensity in 2030 by more than
65% from the 2005 level, and reach the peak of carbon dioxide emissions by 2030
and become carbonneutral by 2060. Wenotethatit will take 71 and 45 years, respec-
tively, for the EU and the US to achieve the carbon neutrality goal from peak carbon
emissions (reached by the EU in 1979 and by the US in 2005) to net zero emissions.
China’s aggressive timetable to achieve carbon neutrality within 40 years means that
the country will face a much steeper slope of carbon emissions than the EU and the
US. How will China strike a balance between the objectives of economic growth in
the past 40 years and carbon neutrality in the next 40 years? We discuss this issue
from an aggregate and a structural point of view. In our aggregate analysis, the most
important task is to identify the peak of China’scarbonemissionsin2030.Webelieve
that in order to take economic growth and emission reduction into consideration, it
is more appropriate to set the carbon peak target in a range to avoid rigid constraints.
From a structural perspective, we discuss how China can achieve its carbon peak
and neutrality goals. Under the framework of a “green premium”, we come up with
a preliminary idea of “technology + carbon pricing” based on the analysis of eight
high-emission industries. We prove that this idea can strike a balance between the
constraints of economic growth and carbon neutrality goals through general equi-
librium analysis using the computable general equilibrium (CGE) model. Finally,
we incorporate social governance into our analysis by discussing the meaning of a
negative green premium, and arrive at this formula: the road to carbon neutrality =
technology + carbon pricing + social governance.
1.1 Seeking a Peak: 9.9–10.8bn Tonnes of Net Carbon Emissions
We examine China’s carbon emission is sue from a historical and a future perspective.
As shown in Table 1.1, while China’s annual carbon emissions in 2019 were much
larger than other economies, the US and the EU, which started industrialization
earlier, had greater cumulative emissions. Moreover, China’s carbon emissions per
capita were 7.1 tonnes, still less than half the US’s 16.1 tonnes (see Table 1.2). Such
historical perspective is very important for countries to distinguish their “common
but differentiated” responsibilities when making coordinated carbonneutrality goals
Guidebook to Carbon Neutrality in China: Macro and Industry Trends under New Constraints