Climatewire
China
doubles down on climate — a day after Trump called it a ‘scam’
By Sara
Schonhardt | 09/25/2025 06:19 AM EDT
https://www.eenews.net/articles/china-doubles-down-on-climate-a-day-after-trump-called-it-a-scam/
Clean
energy is the “trend of our time,” Chinese President Xi Jinping said,
announcing targets for trimming his country’s carbon pollution.
NEW YORK
— China pledged Wednesday to cut its world-leading levels of climate pollution
by up to 10 percent during the next decade — one day after President Donald
Trump urged global leaders to abandon their effort to halt the Earth’s rising
temperatures.
The move,
announced virtually by Chinese President Xi Jinping, also includes plans for
increasing electric vehicles sales and ramping up wind and solar power, which
Xi said he aimed to grow six times over 2020 levels.
That
projection, while low according to China’s current trajectory, dwarfs the
amount of renewable energy produced in the U.S. and seems to contradict Trump’s
assertion Tuesday that China doesn’t use the wind turbines being made in its
own industrial plants.
Xi said
the transition to cleaner energy is the “trend of our time.” In a nod to the
U.S., he added, “while some country is acting against it, the international
community should stay focused on the right direction.”
“These
targets represent China’s best efforts based on the requirements of the Paris
Agreement,” Xi said, referring to the 2015 climate pact. “Meeting these targets
requires both painstaking efforts by China itself, and a supportive and open
international environment.”
Under the
terms of the Paris Agreement, countries are required to submit new
emission-cutting plans every five years that should be stronger than the
previous targets. Instead, Trump has moved to exit Paris for a second time.
Xi’s
message of rising determination to stem pollution contrasts with Trump’s
remarks made a day earlier on the same stage at the United Nations General
Assembly in New York. There, Trump denounced the effort to slow climate change
as a “hoax” and a “con job” and told nations they would lose the global energy
race by pursuing wind and solar over fossil fuels.
“If you
don’t get away from the green energy scam, your country is going to fail,”
Trump told the assembled leaders, while asserting — falsely — that China foists
wind turbines on the world while not using them at home.
“Those
windmills are so pathetic and so bad,” Trump said Tuesday. “And most of them
are built in China, and I give China a lot of credit. They build them, but they
have very few wind farms. So why is it that they build them, and they send them
all over the world, but they barely use them?”
In fact,
China has installed vast amounts of wind power over the past decade. In just
the first five months of this year it added 46 gigawatts of new wind energy,
enough to power more than 30 million homes. During the same period, Trump’s
government has frozen permits for several wind farms proposed or under
construction in the Atlantic, where the U.S. has a small fraction of offshore
turbines compared with China.
China’s
support for global climate efforts is notable, said Li Shuo, director of the
China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute. “That is a sharp
contrast with not only the lack of attention on climate change, but, you know,
active backtracking on climate policies here in the U.S.”
But
China’s pledge falls short of what many nations and scientists say is needed to
avoid the dangerous effects of climate change. Last year, the U.S. under
then-President Joe Biden had pushed China to cut its carbon emissions 30
percent in order to prevent global temperatures from rising more than 1.5
degrees Celsius from preindustrial levels.
That
makes China’s goal of cutting emissions 7 to 10 percent look modest, though the
pledge also said the country would be “striving to do better.” But a higher
number was unrealistic given the receding pressure from the U.S. under Trump
and other countries, said Joanna Lewis, an energy and environment professor at
Georgetown University and longtime China watcher.
“Given
the time we’re in and the political realities in the U.S., China could put
forward a relatively modest target and still be viewed as taking climate change
seriously,” Lewis said.
Many
countries and observers were hoping that with the U.S. out of the picture China
would step up and take on a global leadership role, Lewis noted.
“This
target doesn’t really do that,” she said. But it was announced by the China’s
president, the country is still in the Paris Agreement, and it kicked off the
tone at a climate summit where dozens of other leaders stood up and also
pledged to do more.
Some
green groups were more critical.
“Even for
those with tempered expectations, what’s presented today still falls short,”
Yao Zhe, global policy adviser at Greenpeace East Asia, said in a statement.
“This 2035 target offers little assurance to keep our planet safe, but what’s
hopeful is that the actual decarbonization of China’s economy is likely to
exceed its target on paper.”
Under
promise, over deliver
China’s
new climate plan is its first absolute emissions target, covering all
greenhouse gases and all sectors of its economy. China’s previous goal was to
peak emissions by 2030 and zero them out by 2060.
Though
some believe the country’s emissions may already have peaked or are set to, the
goal of cutting them 7-10 percent by 2035 is “from peak levels,” which Xi
didn’t clarify.
“[That’s]
problematic because it still leaves the door open for near-term increases in
emissions,” said Lauri Myllyvirta, co-founder of the Centre for Research on
Energy and Clean Air. It also creates an incentive for firms and local
governments to increase emissions in the coming years, thereby weakening the
target.
Even as
China builds renewables at a record-breaking pace, it continues to add
coal-fired power — a resource it possesses in abundance — to meet rising energy
demand from its 1.4 billion people.
It is
also surpassing the rest of the world in manufacturing and exporting clean
energy technologies, which could help other developing countries meet their own
climate pledges.
Last
year, China accounted for roughly one-third of global clean energy investments,
at $625 billion, as it poured money into the production of solar panels, wind
turbines, electric vehicles and other technologies. That helped drive down the
price of those goods and boost exports to other fast-growing economies. In the
past four years, China has invested more than $220 billion into clean-tech
manufacturing facilities outside its border, according to the Net Zero
Industrial Policy Lab.
Analysts
say if China continues its soaring clean energy expansion at home it could
likely achieve 30 percent emissions cuts by 2035.
The goal
for increasing wind and solar capacity sixfold, to 3,600 GW, for example, would
amount to a slowdown of recent trends, said Myllyvirta.
“This
target would require less than 200 GW per year versus the 360 GW added last
year and significantly more expected,” he said.
China’s
wind and solar capacity was 1,400 GW at the end of 2024. The amount of wind and
solar under construction there last year was twice as much as the rest of the
world put together, according to the Global Energy Monitor. Wind and solar
capacity now exceeds coal capacity, according to the International Energy
Agency, and the rise in renewables is helping to displace fossil fuels.
Current
trends would also take the nonfossil energy share to well over 40 percent by
2035, making it easy to surpass China’s 30 percent target announced as part of
its climate plans Wednesday.
“It’s a
highly conservative set of targets that provides little clarity on China’s
actual emissions pathway over the next decade, as the clean energy boom will
enable the country to achieve much more,” Myllyvirta said.
Still,
countries have long pushed China to go further and faster and many acknowledge
that in a world lacking in climate leadership, China’s commitment to set hard
targets across its vast economy is significant.
“I mean,
China normally over delivers and under promises, right? So the reverse of many
other countries,” said Rachel Kyte, the United Kingdom’s special climate
representative.
She
anticipated that many environmentalists, media outlets and politicians would
characterize China’s goal as falling short.
This
“shouldn’t be decried just because it’s China,” Kyte said at a Climate Week
event Wednesday. “It should be welcomed on the basis that they will over
deliver again.”
This
story also appears in Energywire.

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