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HARMONY BETWEEN HUMANITY AND NATURE
In the context of the carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals, strengthening nuclear energy cooperation among countries is of great significance in enhancing strategic mutual trust and promoting the establishment of a new global energy governance system.
The most impressive change is that citizens in China are more and more concerned about climate change.
China, as one of the world’s key economic engines, will continue to play a role in stabilizing the global economy in the post-pandemic era.
In traditional Chinese philosophy, challenge is opportunity. We find the way out as a synergy of three different policy objectives, growth, energy security and climate change.
The international community’s response to climate change now faces severe challenges and developing countries have suffered the most from global warming. It urges developed countries to step up to their historical responsibilities and fulfill their due international obligations.
China will comfortably reach the 25% mark for non-fossil energy in 2030 and is well on track to achieve the mid-century target of carbon neutrality before 2060.
It is pleasing to see the expanded scope and intensity of the development of green financing in China, which allows for more robust and rapid long-term development in the future.
China’s successes since the founding of the PRC, and the successes it will surely achieve on the path to becoming a great modern socialist country in all respects, will undoubtedly inspire progressive people the world over.
That China is becoming an innovator in areas that matter to everyone else is much more a good thing than it is a bad one. Everyone has their red lines on certain issues. But in plenty of other areas, there is space and opportunity to work together.
In the era of globalization, the international community should learn to coexist in harmony and cooperate in areas like security, development, climate and energy. After all, no person is an island entire of itself.
China is the only developing country that made very significant commitment to climate change.
The new era is less a rupture in time than one that aims to bridge in positive ways China’s past, present and future.