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Biggest emitter, record renewables: China's climate scorecard Bangkok, Nov 4 (AFP) Nov 04, 2025 China is the world's biggest emitter of planet-warning greenhouse gases but is also installing more renewable energy sources and putting more electric vehicles on its roads than any other country. Ahead of the COP30 climate talks in Brazil, here is a look at China's climate commitments: 
 
 Both its total historical emissions and its emissions per capita are still below those of the United States, but are catching up fast. Coal, a major source of pollution, accounted for nearly 60 percent of Chinese power generation last year, though massive installations of renewable energy are helping meet new electricity demand. It is also a leader in the electric vehicle market, accounting for over 70 percent of global production. Almost half of new cars in China were electric battery-powered or plug-in hybrids in 2024, according to the International Energy Agency. 
 
 But it did not set a baseline year from which to measure those reductions and experts say China needs to cut emissions by closer to 30 percent from 2023 levels to keep global temperatures from rising over 1.5C above pre-industrial levels. There is hope however that China will "underpromise but overachieve" as it has with some previous targets, including on renewable energy. Beijing had previously committed to a peak in emissions by 2030 and to achieve net-zero carbon status three decades later. Some analysts believe emissions have already peaked or are close to doing so thanks to the rising use of renewables and nuclear power. 
 
 The plan was welcomed by UN climate chief Simon Stiell as "a significant moment in our collective climate effort." It includes new targets for renewables, including increasing solar and wind power capacity by six times their 2020 levels to 3,600 gigawatts (GW) by 2035. China said earlier this year it currently has 1,482 GW of wind and solar capacity. Reaching Beijing's new goal would require installing around 200GW of wind and solar capacity a year, far less than China added in 2024. Though renewable energy growth could slow, analysts widely view China as likely to hit and possibly exceed its 2035 target early. 
 
 That too is considered an achievable and unambitious pledge given recent forecasts already project that figure will hit 36 percent in a decade. The Chinese president also promised to ensure "new energy vehicles", which include electric vehicles (EVs), become the "mainstream" in new sales. That is arguably already the case given EVs make up over 40 percent of new purchases. 
 
 The scheme is already in the process of expanding from the power sector to cover heavy industry including cement, steel and aluminum, and officials have signalled plans to apply it to even more sectors. Beijing's 2035 pledge also targets forest cover of 24 billion cubic metres, up from 20 billion currently, according to official figures.  | 
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