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Barack Obama clean energy package United States-China

U.S. President Barack Obama, right, speaks while U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham Clinton listens during a bilateral meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Tuesday, Nov. 17, 2009.
U.S. President Barack Obama, right, speaks while U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham Clinton listens during a bilateral meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Tuesday, Nov. 17, 2009.
Credits: 
(AP Photo/Andy Wong)

President Barack Obama and China President Hu Jintao came to terms on a clean energy package that both countries can build on in the future. The clean energy package includes these measures.

  • U.S.-China Clean Energy Research Center-The Center will be supported by public and private funding of at least $150 million over five years, split evenly between the two countries. Initial research priorities will be building energy efficiency, clean coal including carbon capture and storage, and clean vehicles. The Protocol formally establishing the Center was signed in Beijing by U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Chinese Minister of Science and Technology Wan Gang, and Chinese National Energy Agency Acting Administrator Zhang Guobao.
  • U.S.-China Electric Vehicles Initiative-Building on the first-ever US-China Electric Vehicle Forum in September 2009, the initiative will include joint standards development, demonstration projects in more than a dozen cities, technical roadmapping and public education projects. The two leaders emphasized their countries’ strong shared interest in accelerating the deployment of electric vehicles in order to reduce oil dependence, cut greenhouse gas emissions and promote economic growth.
  • U.S. China Energy Efficiency Action Plan- Under the new plan, the two countries will work together to improve the energy efficiency of buildings, industrial facilities, and consumer appliances. U.S. and Chinese officials will work together and with the private sector to develop energy efficient building codes and rating systems, benchmark industrial energy efficiency, train building inspectors and energy efficiency auditors for industrial facilities, harmonize test procedures and performance metrics for energy efficient consumer products, exchange best practices in energy efficient labeling systems, and convene a new U.S.-China Energy Efficiency Forum to be held annually, rotating between the two countries.
  • U.S. China Renewable Energy Partnership-The Partnership will also provide technical and analytical resources to states and regions in both countries to support renewable energy deployment and will facilitate state-to-state and region-to-region partnerships to share experience and best practices.
  • 21st Century Coal-The two Presidents pledged to promote cooperation on cleaner uses of coal, including large-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) demonstration projects.The two governments are also actively engaging industry, academia, and civil society in advancing clean coal and CCS solutions. The Presidents welcomed: (i) a grant from the U.S. Trade and Development Agency to the China Power Engineering and Consulting Group Corporation to support a feasibility study for an integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) power plant in China using American technology, (ii) an agreement by Missouri-based Peabody Energy to invest participate in GreenGen, a project of several major Chinese energy companies to develop a near-zero emissions coal-fired power plant, (iii) an agreement between GE and Shenhua Corporation to collaborate on the development and deployment of IGCC and other clean coal technologies; and (iv) an agreement between AES and Songzao Coal and Electric Company to use methane captured from a coal mine in Chongqing, China, to generate electricity and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Shale Gas Initiative-The two Presidents announced the launch of a new U.S.-China Shale Gas Resource Initiative. Under the Initiative, the U.S. and China will use experience gained in the United States to assess China’s shale gas potential, promote environmentally-sustainable development of shale gas resources, conduct joint technical studies to accelerate development of shale gas resources in China, and promote shale gas investment in China through the U.S.-China Oil and Gas Industry Forum, study tours, and workshops.
  • U.S. China Energy Cooperation Program-The two Presidents announced the establishment of the U.S.-China Energy Cooperation Program. The program will leverage private sector resources for project development work in China across a broad array of clean energy projects, to the benefit of both nations. More than 22 companies are founding members of the program. The ECP will include collaborative projects on renewable energy, smart grid, clean transportation, green building, clean coal, combined heat and power, and energy efficiency.

Clean energy stocks should bounce on this news. I'm not in the market now but you might want to keep an eye on Sinoma Science & Technology Co., a manufacturer of wind-turbine blades, and Shanghai Fudan Microelectronics Co.,  

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Comments

  • Cynthia Graham Columbus Celebrity Headlines EX 2 years ago
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    I can't help but wonder where this money is coming from.

  • miggs 2 years ago
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    Of the options you mentioned above, combined heat & power (CHP) is the most exciting -- partly it is its own answer to Cynthia's question above about where the money will come from. CHP is really one of the great unsung solutions to our energy crisis, since it cuts greenhouse gas emissions and energy costs at the same time.

    Disclosure: I'm associated with Recycled Energy Development (recycled-energy.com) so I'm not unbiased. But the reason I'm involved is the massive opportunity: EPA and DOE data suggests that our country could cut greenhouse gas emissions by 20% this way. And that's with technology already available. We should be doing much more of this.

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