Partners
06 сакавіка 2026, 09:32
Nation's green development accelerating
BEIJING, 6 March (BelTA - China Daily) - More than a decade ago, when
President Xi Jinping joined deliberations with national lawmakers and
political advisers during China's annual two sessions in 2014, he raised
pointed questions about fine particulate matter, or PM2.5, for three
consecutive days.
"Compared with Beijing, how is the level of
PM2.5 in Shanghai?" Xi asked during a panel discussion with Shanghai
deputies to the National People's Congress, China's top legislature, on
March 5 that year, in a widely reported exchange with the municipality's
ecology and environment bureau head.
At the time, images of
smog-shrouded skylines in Beijing were making global headlines, turning
China's air pollution into an international talking point, and making
PM2.5 - airborne particles measuring 2.5 micrometers or less in diameter
that can harm the lungs - part of everyday vocabulary.
Today,
the term is far less frequently heard. Clearer skies across many Chinese
cities have become increasingly common. According to the Ministry of
Ecology and Environment, China's air quality reached its best level on
record in 2025, with the average PM2.5 concentration dropping to 28
micrograms per cubic meter.
The change reflects not only targeted
pollution-control campaigns, but also a deeper transformation in
China's green development philosophy - one that has been repeatedly
articulated by Xi at the annual meetings of the NPC and the National
Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference,
China's top political advisory body.
In 2015, while joining
deliberations with NPC deputies from Jiangxi province, Xi said that
"protecting the environment is ensuring livelihood", adding that the
eco-environment should be safeguarded as if protecting "one's own eyes
and life", showing his resolve to curb the widespread pollution that was
choking the world's second-largest economy.
In 2016, during
discussions with NPC deputies from Heilongjiang province, he called for
drawing red lines for environmental protection and leaving sufficient
space for sustainable development, in order to leave a beautiful
homeland with blue skies, green land and clear waters for future
generations.
In 2018, addressing fellow lawmakers from the Inner
Mongolia autonomous region, Xi stressed efforts to strengthen the
protection of forests and wetlands, to step up the fight against
desertification and pollution, and to build the "Green Great Wall" along
the northern border of the motherland.
Christoph Nedopil Wang, a
professor of economics at Griffith University in Australia who
specializes in the green economic transition in the Asia-Pacific region,
said that earlier stages of China's approach to green development
focused primarily on visible issues such as air quality and PM2.5
levels.
"Over the past decade, China's philosophy has shifted
from reactive pollution control - often described as a 'pollute first,
clean up later' approach - to a proactive, systemic economic
transformation," he said.
Xi has repeatedly emphasized during the
two sessions the need to maintain "strategic resolve" in advancing
ecological civilization. In 2019, while addressing Inner Mongolia
deputies to the NPC, he stressed that environmental protection and
economic development are closely integrated and complement each other,
and warned against sacrificing ecological standards for short-term
growth.
During the two sessions in 2020, he described ecological
protection as a long-term plan for the benefit of the people, stressing
that China must adhere to the principle of prioritizing ecological
conservation and pursuing green development.
In September 2020,
when delivering a speech at the 75th Session of the United Nations
General Assembly, Xi announced that China would strive to have carbon
dioxide emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before
2060 - marking the first time that Beijing laid out a concrete timeline
for net-zero emissions.
Wang, from Griffith University, said Xi's
emphasis on strategic resolve signals China's policy continuity and
long-term planning. While many Western countries face fluctuating
environmental commitments, China's system provides predictability for
large-scale green finance and industrial investment, Wang noted.
In
his view, China treats the green transition not as a luxury to be
discarded during economic uncertainty, but as a fundamental requirement
for future competitiveness, resource security and social stability. "By
maintaining this course, China aims to solidify its dominance in global
green supply chains," said Wang.
Wang Xiaoli, an associate
professor in the Department of Social and Ecological Development at the
National Academy of Governance, said that since the 18th National
Congress of the Communist Party of China in 2012, China's green
transformation has gone far beyond the environmental sector itself,
contributing to a high-quality development model.
"China's 'green
content' in economic development has continued to rise, with green and
low-carbon industries now accounting for more than 18 percent of GDP,"
she said, noting that advanced manufacturing with environmental and
climate-friendly characteristics, green technologies, digital
transformation, artificial intelligence and high-value-added services
have emerged as new growth engines. "The fact that China has been able
to achieve rapid economic development while steadily improving
environmental quality has demonstrated to the world the effectiveness of
this strategic resolve," she said.
Institutional support has
also strengthened. During the two sessions in 2023, the CPPCC officially
established a new sector, "environment and resources", adding it to the
34 sectors within the top political advisory body, reflecting a
heightened priority on ecological protection, sustainable development
and green energy goals in national policy planning.
In 2024, when
joining the discussion of political advisers, including those from the
sector of environment and resources, Xi, who is also general secretary
of the CPC Central Committee, said that the CPC Central Committee always
attaches great importance to environmental protection.
He
emphasized the need to secure red lines in the development and
protection of territorial space, and improve the region-specific
environmental management system, in order to further consolidate the
ecological foundations of high-quality development.
On the
country's plan to control new pollutants following its treatment of smog
and black and malodorous water bodies, Xi said that both newfound and
persisting environmental problems need to be addressed.
"Today,
the focus of China's green development philosophy is firmly on
ecological civilization and high-quality development," said Wang of
Griffith University. "In recent two sessions, this has culminated in the
concept of new quality productive forces," which integrates green
technology as a pillar of economic growth and national security, rather
than treating environmental protection as a cost, he said.
As
this year marks the beginning of China's 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-30)
period, analysts said the international community will closely watch for
further policy signals regarding China's green development at this
year's two sessions, which begin this week.
Wang of the National
Academy of Governance noted that the recommendations for formulating the
15th Five-Year Plan outlined key areas for accelerating the green
transition across the board and building a beautiful China. She said
that the goal of peaking carbon emissions, before 2030, the final year
of the 15th Five-Year Plan, is expected to draw particular attention,
especially regarding new policy instruments, accounting systems and
supervision mechanisms.
Wang, the Griffith University professor,
said that key areas of international interest will likely include
expanding the national carbon market to heavy industries such as steel
and cement, integrating AI into green manufacturing and offering new
incentives for transition finance.
How China balances domestic
carbon goals with its role as a leading exporter of green energy
equipment amid rising trade tensions will also be closely monitored, he
added.