BEIJING, Oct. 8 (Xinhua) --
The Asian Development Bank said Tuesday it launched an 800-million-yuan (US$117
million) program to support financing of energy efficiency projects in China.
Under the pilot scheme, ADB is extending partial credit guarantees for loans
to retrofit existing buildings to save energy and to support the construction of
new energy-efficient buildings, Manila-based ADB said in a statement.
China has a goal of making new buildings 50 percent more energy-efficient by
2010, with major cities like Beijing and Shanghai aiming for 65 percent, as the
nation copes with greenhouse gas emissions and energy shortage.
Industry experts have estimated that building-related energy consumption
accounts for around 30 percent of China's total energy use.
The government effort, which is boosting demand for energy-efficient
materials and technologies for heating, cooling, ventilating and lighting,
however, faces challenges such as lending hurdles and inexperienced evaluation.
ADB said Chinese commercial banks needing to improve further technical
evaluations of energy-efficiency projects to ensure that financing is available.
It has chosen Standard Chartered Bank as the first partner financial institution
to share the project credit risks in the pilot program.
The ADB expects retrofitting of existing buildings under the program to
typically lead to energy savings of 20 to 40 percent.
"Given the country's rapid urbanization, energy efficiency in buildings will
have a long-lasting and large cumulative impact," said Robert Wihtol, ADB's
country director for China.
The program is part of the ADB's Energy Efficiency Initiative that aims to
provide at least US$1 billion a year for funding energy efficiency and clean
energy projects.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)