Urban China Part 2

Page 1


5 China’s Urbanization and Food Security

Introduction China’s urbanization and the accompanying structural changes demand a new look at China’s domestic food self-sufficiency objectives. Urbanization is a reflection of and a contributing factor to economic growth and development. In this process, overall output and average incomes rise. Demographic change, change in diets and food consumption patterns, emergence of environmental constraints (such as land or water concerns and environmental pollution), transformation of rural factor markets, food supplychain development, market and distribution systems transformation, and agricultural technology and farm scale changes are linked in various ways. These factors will affect China’s food production capacity and food availability over the coming decades. Understanding how the balance between China’s domestic demand and domestic production of food will evolve will be important in formulating appropriate and effective policies. China has achieved tremendous results in agriculture over the past 30 years. From 1978 to 2011, China’s agricultural gross domestic product (GDP) at constant prices grew at an annual rate of 4.6 percent, four times the rate of population growth. Main-

taining such a high average growth rate in agriculture for more than 30 years, while allowing many people to move from agriculture to other sectors, is a truly extraordinary achievement. China’s agricultural production structure has also shifted gradually from relatively low-value to higher-value products, largely consistent with resource endowments and comparative advantage. Although still important, cereal crop production no longer dominates but is matched by the development and expansion of higher-value crops and livestock. In 1980, crops, livestock, and aquaculture products accounted for 75.6 percent, 18.4 percent, and 1.7 percent of total output value, respectively. By 2011, the share of crops in total output value had dropped to 54 percent, while animal husbandry and aquaculture had increased to 33 percent and 10 percent, respectively (NSBC 2012). Growth in agricultural output was first achieved through institutional and market reforms, such as the introduction of the Household Responsibility System and the subsequent lifting of food price and procurement regulations. Later, growth was achieved through agricultural intensification and technological progress. From 1980 to 2012, China’s grain production rose from 320.56 million tons to 589.57 million tons, an 337


338

URBAN CHINA

increase of 84 percent. Rice production grew by 46 percent, and wheat and corn grew by 118 percent and 232 percent, respectively. Since 2004, China’s grain production has continuously increased; since 2007, annual grain output has exceeded 500 million tons. Farmer per capita income also continued to grow, reaching RMB 7,917 in 2012, with an inflation-adjusted real increase of 8.8 percent per year since 2003. China’s food security, as measured both by the aggregate availability of food and by the access of vulnerable individuals and households to food, has improved dramatically over the past 30 years. Food security problems at the level of households and in dividuals—the problem of subsistence and vulnerability—have been substantially reduced. Consumption patterns have diversified, and nutritional status has improved. Market integration has addressed the problem of regional food insecurity resulting from unequal spatial distribution of resources (J. Huang and Rozelle 1998). At the national level, China has maintained food selfsufficiency and even sustained a net export balance during the period of the 11th FiveYear Plan (2006–10). China has been able to meet the objective of domestic self-sufficiency in the two major food grains, rice and wheat, with limited dependence on global food markets so far. But concerns about China’s future food selfsufficiency—in particular its future grain selfsufficiency—have drawn wide attention both at home and abroad in recent years. As the income of urban and rural households has increased, aggregate food demand in China has also been increasing, along with demand for higher-quality agricultural products (Bai and others 2010; X. Chen 2011; J. Huang, Yang, and Rozelle 2010). At the same time, supply constraints have become more pronounced, particularly because of decreasing land and water resources for agriculture, increasing environmental pollution, and increasing labor and production costs (Han 2010; Ma and Niu 2009). Strong growth in demand and increasing supply constraints potentially pose challenges for China’s future aggregate food self-

sufficiency. Aggregate food self-sufficiency fell below 98 percent in 2010. Grain selfsufficiency fell to 92 percent in 2010 and to 88 percent in 2012 because of imports of soybeans and maize used as animal feed. Although domestic self-sufficiency in rice and wheat remained at nearly 100 percent, soybean imports reached 58.3 million tons in 2012. China has also shifted from being a net exporter of corn in the early 2000s to an importer in 2010, with net imports of 5.2 million tons in 2012. The driving factors behind increasing demand (and domestic supply shortfalls) for soybeans and corn are the growing demand for animal products and the development of China’s livestock industries. Imports of other products have also grown: sugar (to 3.7 million tons in 2012); edible oil (to 9.6 million tons); dairy products (to 6.2 million tons for fresh milk); and pork, beef, and mutton (to 0.7 million tons). Concerns about constraints on sustainable food production as a result of urbanization are increasing. Domestic production patterns have already shifted from naturally rain-fed coastal areas to irrigated areas in the North China Plain and the Northeast as farmland has been converted to urban use in the central and southern coastal provinces. Urbanization is likely to further increase the amount of water needed for domestic and industrial uses, thereby increasing intersectoral competition for water and reducing China’s total irrigation area and crop yield (Du and others 2005; Wang and others 2008; Wen and Ding 2011). Urbanization will also result in continued conversion of farmland to nonagricultural uses. However, although China’s agricultural production may decrease with the continuing reduction in farmland area (F. Chen and others 2010; Z. Chen and others 2010; M. Huang, M. Chen, and Zhang 2011) and grain production potential may be threatened (Shu and Chen 2012), urbanization may also stimulate the intensification of land use and thus counteract the decrease in farmland through more efficient use of land for housing in rural and urban areas (Huang and others 2005). The comparative advantage of laborintensive farming of grains has greatly dimin-


CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

ished. Growing labor constraints and rising input prices (labor, diesel, pesticide, farming tools) have increased the cost of food production. Land transfer costs and farm overhead costs are also rising quickly. With urbanization, rural labor will continue to move to the cities, and migration will further drive up labor and production costs in agriculture (Hu and Ni 2010; S. Li and H. Li 2012; Mu and others 2013). How these shifts will impact China’s domestic food production capacity requires careful analysis. Urbanization will also affect food demand and consumption through income growth. Overall demand for food is likely to increase with income-driven urbanization because the demand for highercost foods such as fruits, vegetables, and animal products rises much more rapidly with income growth than demand for basic food staples such as rice and wheat. These goods require much higher levels of intermediate and factor inputs than basic staples, particularly for livestock products, given the inefficiencies of feed conversion. China’s gradual alignment of trading patterns with comparative advantage following its accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the surge in imports of soybeans and of corn is a reflection of these changes. Food consumption patterns differ between China’s urban and rural residents, even at the same level of income. The aggregate impact of the change in consumption patterns on indirect grain consumption in the course of urbanization has not been well documented. Several studies have suggested that the consumption of staple foods decreases as people move to cities, whereas their consumption of edible oil, sugar, fruits, and animal and aquatic products increases (Huang 1999; Huang and Bouis 2001; Huang and David 1993). Food consumption surveys also show that rural migrant workers in cities consume more grain and more livestock products than rural households. Migration thus may increase grain consumption significantly as both direct demand and indirect demand for animal feed increase (Wu 2013). The transformation from an agricultural society to an urban society has potentially important implications for access to food

because most urban households and migrating rural residents tend to rely on food purchases rather than their own household production. Decreased reliance on agricultural income reduces the exposure of households previously engaged in farming to adverse output shocks, such as those resulting from droughts or floods, to agricultural output and incomes. However, as people move to cities, households become completely dependent on purchased food. At low levels of income, they spend a large share of their incomes on food and can be very vulnerable to increases in the prices of staple foods. The food security of a household that spends 60 percent of its income on food is seriously threatened when food prices rise. Trade can allow China to meet the rising demand for particular types of agricultural goods. Increased imports to meet domestic demand are well within the capacity of China’s existing trade partners in North America and South America for maize and soybeans and in Australia and New Zealand for dairy products. But policy makers have understandable concerns about large-scale reliance on imports of basic staples, particularly rice and wheat. Meeting the demand for basic staples will remain a strategic focus but is likely to be relatively easy for China both because per capita demand for basic staples is falling and because China’s yields continue to grow because of investments in research and development to increase productivity. Investments in research and development also help to raise farmers’ incomes. Providing adequate access to food in rural areas remains an important policy objective, but threats to food access may also increase for urban residents. There are varying levels of food security across regions within China, with some regions still facing food security issues, particularly in western poor rural areas (Nie, Bi, and Zhang 2010). Urban residents that depend on the market for all of their food needs may face risks in accessing affordable food as food supply chains are becoming longer through regional integration and more vulnerable because of fluctuations in transportation and energy costs. As China continues to urbanize, the implica-

339


340

URBAN CHINA

tions of urbanization on disadvantaged segments of the population need to be carefully assessed with regard to food price stabilization policies and social protection programs.

supply of food in China that Emiko Fukase and Will Martin (2013) of the World Bank conducted for this study.

Structure of the chapter Methodology This report provides an overall assessment of the projected effects of China’s urbanization on domestic food production capacity and food demand over the next two decades. The analysis builds on extensive empirical work carried out for this study in 2013, work that built on the China Agricultural Policy Simulation Model (CAPSiM) of the Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy (CCAP). CAPSiM is a sectoral equilibrium model that covers a wide range of agricultural crops and livestock products and forecasts China’s demand for and supply of agricultural products for the 2012–30 period. The model uses the underlying macroeconomic and demographic assumptions included in supporting report 1 on urbanization and growth. The CAPSiM simulations build on separate empirical analyses of the effects of urbanization on the markets for water, land, and labor. Impacts on agricultural water consumption and agricultural production are analyzed based on (a) historic trends of water usage across the agricultural, industrial, and domestic sectors; (b) quantitative analysis of the relationship between urbanization and agricultural water availability; and (c) application of the China Water Simulation Model (CWSM) to estimate changes in cropping areas and output per unit at the national and individual river basin levels. J. Huang and others (2013) describe the research approach and methodology in their background paper. The effects of urbanization on arable land conversion and agricultural bioproductivity are estimated using remote sensing and econometric analyses (Deng, Huang, and Rozelle 2013). China’s rural labor market transformation and its impacts on the agricultural sector are described in X. Wang, Huang, and Rozelle (2013). Urbanization and its impacts on agricultural water are discussed in J. Wang, Huang, and Rozelle (2013). This report also builds on analytical work on income growth and demand for and

The chapter first provides a retrospective and outlook on China’s food demand and supply in an international perspective. It then discusses the supply constraints on domestic agricultural production: water, land, and labor. Next it reviews the quantitative impacts of urbanization on aggregate food supply and demand and discusses the likely supply shortfalls. It concludes with a set of recommendations for China’s future food security and social protection policies.

China’s food demand and supply projection in international comparison China’s rapid economic growth since marketoriented reforms began in 1978 has contributed greatly to improvements in Chinese diets both in quantity and in composition. Total calorie intake per capita per day in China has grown substantially, from 2,163 kilocalories (kcal) in 1980 to 3,036 kcal in 2009. China’s growth in calorie intake has been much faster than the world average, which grew from 2,490 kcal in 1980 to 2,831 kcal in 2009. Calorie consumption levels are now reported to be approximately equal to those in Japan and in the Republic of Korea but remain lower than levels observed in the United States and in the European Union. Protein intake nearly doubled from 54 grams (g) per capita per day in 1980 to 94 g per capita in 2009, with about three quarters of this growth from increased consumption of livestock products. Fat intake nearly tripled from 34 g per capita per day in 1980 to 96 g per capita in 2009, with about two-thirds of this growth coming from increases in livestock product consumption. Calorie intake among high-income countries, namely the United States and Japan, has declined somewhat in recent years (figure 5.1). A breakdown of the proportion of calories sourced from crop and livestock prod-


341

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

FIGURE 5.1 Total calorie (in kilocalories per capita per day) and protein consumption in various countries (in grams per capita per day) a. Total calories

b. Total protein

4,000

120

Grams per capita per day

Grams per capita per day

110 3,500 3,000 2,500 2,000

100 90 80 70 60 50

1,500

40 1980

1990 China

2000

European Union

2008 Japan

1980

1990

Korea, Rep.

2000

United States

2008

World

Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Statistics Division.

tion is projected to peak around 2025, at a level about 3 percent higher than in 2013— the primary driver of food consumption in the near future is likely to be growth in per capita consumption. China’s per capita consumption levels for both calories and CEs have been very consistent with global trends. Food consumption is closely related to income, and although there is broad variation around the relationship FIGURE 5.2 Population growth vs. diet change: Change in CE consumption 1,600 1,400 1,200 Tons (millions)

ucts in China reveals that a majority of the increase comes from the rise in the consumption of livestock products, while the calorie intake from crops has been relatively steady at around 2,300 kcal per capita per day since the early 1990s. Calorie intake seems unlikely to rise dramatically in the future but dietary patterns are likely to adjust further as consumers increasingly source their calories from livestock products, which take much greater amounts of resources per kilogram consumed, measured in cereal equivalents (CEs) (K. Rask and N. Rask 2011). This shift in diet will increase the quantity of resources required to meet China’s food demand for an extended period to come, and suggests future pressure on world food production. China’s CE consumption 1 expanded nearly four times from 407 million tons in 1980 to 1,479 million tons in 2009 (figure 5.2), while over the same period China’s population increased by only about 40 percent, from 1 billion to 1.4 billion. If growth of CE consumption in China since 1980 is broken down into the factors of population growth and diet change, one-third of the increase in food consumption is attributable to population growth, and the remaining two-thirds results from changes in diet. As China’s population growth slows—and its popula-

1,000 800 600 400 200 0 1980

1990 1980 level

Source: Fukase and Martin 2013.

Diet changes

2000

2008

Population growth


342

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 5.3 Relationship between CE food consumption and income

Tonnes per capita per year

2.5 Australia United States France Italy Germany Spain United Kingdom

2 Brazil

1.5

Hungary

Mexico China

1

Malaysia

Korea, Rep. Japan

Philippines Thailand Indonesia India

.5

0 0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

GDP per capita (PPP, constant 2005 int’l $)

Source: Fukase and Martin 2013. Note: Data are based on 2005–09 averages. PPP = purchasing power parity.

FIGURE 5.4 Calorie and CE consumption trends against income in China, 1980–2009

Calories per capita per day

20,000

15,000

10,000

5,000

0 0

10,000

20,000

30,000

40,000

50,000

Real GDP per capita (PPP, 2005 int’l $) China’s calorie consumption Fitted calorie consumption

China CE consumption Fitted CE consumption

Source: Fukase and Martin 2013.

between food consumption in CEs and real income levels, China’s food consumption is likely to increase substantially for some time as income levels continue to rise (figure 5.3). Consumption of calories tends to level off

much earlier and at a much lower level than consumption of CEs (figure 5.4). China has out-performed most countries in terms of agricultural output. Output, which is only slightly below consumption levels, is substantially above the global trend level given China’s land endowment and income level. This may reflect the relatively high quality of much of China’s agricultural land and almost certainly reflects the extraordinary efforts made in China to increase productivity in recent decades. Agricultural output is likely to continue to increase in response to the productivity growth that is driving increases in national output. Figure 5.5 compares CE consumption with the estimated relationship between income levels and production. To allow for the comparison between countries, the estimated production schedule is adjusted so that each country has the same per capita land endowment as China (0.21 hectares per person). This relationship implies that production rises in line with income, although less rapidly than income because of the secular decline in agriculture’s share of national income. Growth rates of consumption and growth rates of output are likely to be broadly comparable as incomes grow to levels around $20,000 in purchasing power parity terms. After that level, it seems likely that the consumption growth will slow down relative to production and the gap between supply and demand will begin to close. This is, however, a tentative scenario. If, for instance, China reduced investments in agricultural productivity, or climate change reduced productivity, then the gap between supply and demand might increase. China is also in a very different situation from neighboring economies, such as Japan or Korea, where the much smaller land endowments per person require that continuing large net food imports are likely to be required. International comparisons reveal striking differences between countries in the extent to which food imports as a share of total consumption have changed. When rice, wheat, maize, and soybeans are considered together, most lower-income countries have maintained close to 100 percent selfsufficiency, but this ratio has declined sharply


343

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

Resource constraints to agricultural production

FIGURE 5.5 Production, consumption, and income in China, 1980–2009 3

Tonnes per capita per year

in the higher-income East Asian economies (Japan, Korea, and Taiwan, China) (figure 5.6). China, given its larger land endowment per capita, seems unlikely to follow the path of Japan, Korea, or Taiwan, China, and will retain a much higher level of aggregate grain self-sufficiency. China’s recent declining selfsufficiency ratio for grains is predominantly attributable to a large increase in soybean imports (figure 5.7).

Urbanization and water: Intersectoral competition and food security Water is a scarce resource in China, which has a total annual availability of fresh water of 2,300 cubic meters per capita, less than one-quarter of the world’s average. Annual precipitation is unevenly distributed across the country, with more than 800 millimeters (mm) in most parts of southern China, between 400 mm and 800 mm in the northeast and northern regions, and below 400 mm in the northwest. Because of the close relationship between water availability and land productivity, productivity is generally higher in the Southeast and lower in the

France Germany

Malaysia

2

1

Australia

Hungary

Brazil

Italy United Kingdom Spain

China Thailand Philippines Indonesia Mexico India

Korea, Rep. Japan

10,000

30,000

0 0

20,000

China CE consumption CE Production at China land level CE Production, land = .21 ha (China)

50,000

China CE production CE Consumption

Source: Fukase and Martin 2013.

Northwest, and intermediate in the Northeast and North. Intersectoral competition for water and the increasing reallocation of water from agricultural uses to industrial and domestic uses are likely uses to have implications for China’s

200 180 160 140 120 Ratio

40,000

GDP per capita (PPP, 2005 int’l $)

FIGURE 5.6 Grain self-sufficiency ratios for selected Asian countries, 1960–2013

100 80 60 40 20 0 1960–61

United States

1969–70

1978–79

1987–88

1996–97

China Philippines

Japan Thailand

Korea, Rep. Bangladesh

Taiwan, China India

2005–06

2012–13

Indonesia

Source: Production, Supply and Distribution (PSD) data, USDA. Note: The figure reflects the differences between production and consumption, which are the sum of net imports and the changes in stock (production – consumption = exports – imports + changes in stock).


344

URBAN CHINA

Metric tons (thousands)

FIGURE 5.7 Contribution of major grains to China’s supply-demand gap, 1960–2013 3 2 1 0 –1 –2 –3 –4 –5 –6 –7 –8 1960–61

1969–70

1978–79 Corn

1987–88 Soybeans

1996–97 Rice

2005–06

2012–13

Wheat

Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Production, Supply and Distribution (PSD) data. Note: The figures reflect the differences between production and consumption, which are the sum of net imports and the changes in stock (production – consumption = exports – imports + changes in stock).

TABLE 5.1 Total increase rate of water use in China by sector, 1949–2011 Total increase rate (percent) Period

Total

Agriculture

Industry

Domestic

1949–65 1965–80 1980–93 1993–2000 2000–11 1949–2011

166 62 17 6 9 481

154 45 3 −1 −1 274

654 152 98 26 28 5,991

200 1,456 70 21 37 13,065

Source: Ministry of Water Resources 2006–10.

FIGURE 5.8 Water use in China: Total and by sector

100

1

2

1 11

80 Percent

food production capacity. Total water consumption in China increased from 103 billion cubic meters in 1949 to nearly 600 billion cubic meters in 2011, or by 3 percent annually. The periods from 1949–65 and 1965–80 saw the biggest percentage increases. After 1993, despite further increased total demand, the rate of increase slowed (table 5.1). Water consumption in industry and for domestic use has increased significantly faster than in the agricultural sector. In fact, during the past 20 years, water consumption in agriculture has remained constant while industrial and domestic water usage has continued to increase (figure 5.8). However, agriculture remains the biggest consumer of China’s water, accounting for 62 percent

13 24

60 97 40

88 62

20 0 1949 Domestic

1978 Industry

2011 Agriculture

Source: J. Wang and others 2013.

of the country’s total water consumption in 2011 (figure 5.9). Urbanization is the driving factor contributing to rising water consumption through the industrial and domestic sectors. As China’s urban population increased from 28 percent to 51 percent from 1993 to 2011, the share of agricultural water use to total use declined from 73 percent to 62 percent (figure 5.10). As rural residents continue move to cities and as living standards increase, domestic water use is likely to further increase. From 2006 to 2010, per capita


345

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

FIGURE 5.9 Sectoral shares of China’s total water consumption 7,000

Cubic meters (millions)

6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 1949

1993 Total

2000

2004

Agriculture

Industry

Source: J. Wang and others 2013.

FIGURE 5.10 Trends in agricultural sector water consumption and urbanization 100 90 80 70 Percent

water use for urban residents was 208 liters, already three times that for rural residents (Ministry of Water Resources 2006–10). Based on the CWSM projection results, 2 a 1 percentage point increase in China’s urban population will result in a 0.47 percent decline in the share of agricultural water consumption because of intersectoral reallocation. By 2030, according to the CWSM, agriculture’s share of total water consumption will have decreased to 52 percent. China’s total water shortage is estimated to have reached 48.7 billion cubic meters, indicating that 8 percent of China’s total water demand cannot be satisfied by the country’s water supply, given current water resource management policies. Water scarcity is more pronounced in China’s northern river basins, including the Hai, Huai, Liao, Songhua, and Yellow rivers. Water scarcity is expected to increase significantly in China; the overall water supply gap is projected to increase from today’s 8 percent to 38 percent in 2030. Water demand increases are projected for all river basins in response to urban and industrial growth, population growth, and planned expansion of irrigated areas. China’s major rivers basins are displayed in map 5.1. Water supply and water balance data for the 10 major river basins in China are summarized in table 5.2. Through domestic food trade and the expansion of irrigated areas in northern and northeastern China, about 52 billion cubic meters of water are transferred annually, in virtual form, through agricultural products to the southern provinces. If the amount of water lost through evapotranspiration is not replenished, crop water use will result in a localized net water loss and will become unsustainable. Overuse of available water resources has resulted in severe groundwater depletion, with the deep water aquifer under the North China plain, for example, already dropping at about 3 meters per year. About half of the communities using ground water in the northern plains reported a decline in ground water levels between the mid-1990s and mid-2000s (Lohmar and Hansen 2007; J. Wang, Huang, and Yang 2009). Agricultural water demand will increase in all 10 river basins between 2010 and 2030,

60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 Agricultural water use

Urbanization rate

Source: J. Wang and others 2013.

from an estimated 11 percent in the Huai river basin to as high as 30 percent in the Yellow river basin. Particularly large supply shortfalls are projected for the Hai, Yellow, Yangtze, and Southeast river basins. Water consumption in the industry sector is projected to grow by 170 percent over current consumption, nearly 10 times faster than water consumption growth in the domestic and agricultural sectors. In the Yangtze and Southeast river basins, total water demand will increase by 70 percent and 82 percent, respectively

2010 Domestic


346

URBAN CHINA

Liao, Songhua, and Huai basins, with a projected increase of only 4 percent. China’s plans to expand irrigation will also be challenged by water scarcity and by intersectoral competition for water. China’s National Integrated Water Resources Plan for the period 2010–30 envisions an expansion of China’s irrigated areas by 15 percent, from currently 58.6 million hectares to more than 67 million hectares (table 5.3). Most of the rice production in China, which heavily relies on irrigation, comes from the relatively water-abundant southern parts of China. Most of northern China receives sufficient rain for summer grain production during normal years. Winter wheat production, however, relies heavily on irrigation. Overall, it is estimated that 90 percent of China’s rice production is irrigated, as is 85 percent of total wheat production, 45 percent of maize production, and 30 percent of its soybean output (Fischer, Ermolieva, and Sun 2010). Notwithstanding the increase in irrigation envisioned in China’s water resource plan, water reallocation from agriculture to urbanization is projected to cause a decrease in irrigated areas and a simultaneous expansion of rain-fed areas, if water policies remain unchanged. A one percentage point increase in the urban population will be associated with a 0.63 percent decrease in total irrigated area for all crops, whereas while rainfed areas will expand by 0.77 percent. This

MAP 5.1 Major river systems in China and locations of the 10 largest river basins

Songhuajiang River Basin

Liaohe River Basin North-Western Interior River Basin

Haihe River Basin Yellow River Basin

Huaihe River Basin

South-Western River Basin Yangtze River Basin

South-Eastern River Basin

River River Basin

Pearl River Basin

IBRD 40998 | JUNE 2014 This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries.

Source: J. Wang and others 2013.

while this increase will be about 30 percent in the Liao, Hai, and Northwest river basins. The slowest change in water demand growth will occur for domestic water demand in the

TABLE 5.2 Water supply, water demand, and water balance in China’s 10 major river basins, averaged over 2006–10 Water supply

River basin

China Liaohe Songhuajiang Hai Huai Yellow Yangtze Pearl Southeast Southwest Northwest

Water demand

Total (108 m3)

Share of surface water (percent)

Share of ground water (percent)

Total (108 m3)

5,902 205 421 377 607 388 1,946 880 338 106 633

81 44 58 34 71 66 95 95 97 97 82

18 55 42 64 28 33 4 5 3 3 18

6,389 234 459 513 674 453 1,992 908 351 117 688

Note: 108 m3 = 100 million cubic meters.

Water balance

Share of Share of Share of agricultural industrial domestic water demand water demand water demand (percent) (percent) (percent)

65 72 74 77 72 76 50 58 50 83 91

22 13 17 10 15 13 36 23 34 7 3

11 13 7 11 12 9 13 17 14 10 3

Water gap (108 m3)

Gap rate (percent)

−487 −29 −39 −136 −67 −65 −46 −28 −13 −10 −55

−8 −12 −8 −26 −10 −14 −2 −3 −4 −9 −8


347

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

trend is projected across all river basin areas but would be most pronounced in the Songhua River Basin, where the respective change will be a decrease of 2.04 percent of irrigated areas and an expansion of rain-fed areas by 0.56 percent is projected. Irrigation area expansion targets may be difficult to achieve. For China as a whole, average crop yield is projected to decrease by 0.09 percent per 1 percentage point increase in China’s urban population, but the effects of urbanization on irrigated and rain-fed areas will differ between regions. Generally, productivity of irrigated areas is greater than that of rain-fed areas. Wheat will face the sharpest decline trend for its irrigated areas, with a projected decrease of as much as 2.61 percent, while its rain-fed areas will increase by 4.37 percent, resulting in an estimated net yield reduction of 0.6 percent. The other important crops whose irrigated areas will be reduced are oil crops and rice. Their irrigated areas will be reduced by 1.61 percent and 0.68 percent, respectively. In contrast, irrigated areas of soybean crops may increase by 3.56 percent, probably resulting from economic incentives for soybean production on irrigated land in view of an overall reduction in water available for agriculture. China’s urbanization will significantly reduce agricultural water use, all other things being equal. Every 2 percentage point increase in the urbanization rate is accompanied by a 1 percentage point drop in the availability of water for agricultural use. Improving water resources management in the agricultural sector will therefore become even more important in the coming decade. Wang and others (2005) estimate that only 40 percent of the water allocated to irrigation in China is actually used. And the potential for improvement is even greater given that much of this 40 percent is used very intensively, such as for flood irrigation. During the 2000s, the amount of irrigation water—0.96 cubic meters—used to produce 1 kilogram (kg) of grain was twice the amount used in developed countries (Zhao and others 2008). Given the great potential for improved water use efficiency in China, there may actually be no need for the increased competition for water from the expanding urban sec-

TABLE 5.3 Planned expansion of irrigation areas River basin

China Liao River Songhua River Hai River Huai River Yellow River Yangtze River Pearl River Southeast River Southwest River Northwest River

2010 (million hectares)

2030 (million hectares)

Planned expansion (percent)

58.6 2.6 5.2 7.6 11.1 5.3 15.0 4.3 2.1 0.9 4.4

67.2 3.0 6.1 8.6 11.9 6.8 17.2 5.0 2.3 1.1 5.3

15 13 17 14 7 28 14 14 13 18 20

Sources: Ministry of Water Resources 2006–10, National Integrated Water Resources Plan 2010–30.

tor to result in any reduction in agricultural output. However, to really use water more efficiently, it is not sufficient to identify changes in water use technology, such as moving from flood to spray or drip irrigation, or to advocate a move toward greater use of those technologies. Unless farmers have an incentive to move toward more efficient, and typically more costly, forms of irrigation, they will be extremely reluctant to do so. However, international experience has shown that introducing the right management system can allow a large expansion in irrigated area with the same water supply (Easter and Liu 2005). One way to increase water use efficiency is to introduce pricing schemes that reduce the gap between what agricultural and nonagricultural users pay for water, as well as reduce the costs associated with the distribution of water to its point of use. The reallocation of water from low-valued uses to high-valued uses is the key to achieving greater output from the available water. While retaining these advantages, water pricing schemes can be modified to avoid creating large redistributions of income—and particularly to avoid hurting poor users—by policies such as charging much less on an initial block of water. If introducing water pricing is not politically feasible, alternative arrangements, such as water users’ associations, can be used to improve the efficiency of water use within


URBAN CHINA

irrigation districts. Wang and others (2005) fi nd that these have been effective in reducing irrigation water consumption where they have been implemented in ways that provide incentives for reductions in water use. Further progress on water use reform could substantially reduce water consumption and potentially allow significant increases in agricultural output by allowing expansion of irrigation in some areas.

Migration and rural labor, wages, and mechanization Urbanization affects agricultural labor availability and agricultural production in complex ways. Labor costs in agriculture rise because of growing demand for rural labor. Movement of labor out of agriculture is an inherent and unavoidable part of the process of economic growth and urbanization. Consumption patterns within the country shift, and the share of spending on food drops precipitately. Increased investment in the nonagricultural sector creates jobs and creates incentives for workers to move. Migration out of rural areas into China’s cities may also be stimulated by progress on reform of the hukou system3 and of land titling, which would provide more flexibility for migrants to integrate into cities permanently. At the same time, rural township development may help offset or balance increases in rural labor costs. Rising wages also accelerate the process of mechanization of agriculture. If machines can replace farmers that are leaving the agricultural sector, production need not be affected. In many areas across China, however, mechanization will remain a significant challenge and its potential may be limited because of topographical conditions, such as small farmland plot size and inaccessibility in mountainous areas. Such constraints to mechanization will likely have negative impacts on agricultural production as rural people move to the cities.

has been a particularly prominent feature of China, emerging in the 1980s and 1990s. In the early 1980s, only 15 percent of China’s rural labor force had a job off the farm (NSBC 2000). By 2000, the share of farmers working off the farm had reached 45 percent. Another decade later, by 2011, more than 60 percent of China’s rural labor force worked off the farm (figure 5.11). In absolute terms, of China’s 500 million rural laborers, more than 218 million worked off the farm, full or part-time, in 2000. Nearly 320 million worked off-farm in 2011. Many of these farmers found employment in the wage-earning sector. They also found or created off-farm jobs in the nonfarm selfemployed sector (Zhang and others 2006). Between 1980 and 2000, the number of rural workers that left home and found a wageearning job rose from 9.3 million to 56.0 million (de Brauw and others 2002). An estimated 60 million rural workers remained at home working in township and village enterprises for a wage during this time (NSBC 1990, 2000). The number of farmers who started nonfarm self-employed enterprises rose from 26 million to nearly 80 million between 1980 and 2000. By 2000, there were far more self-employed migrants than migrant wage earners. Migration expanded steadily and accelerated throughout the 2000s. Although the global economic crisis of 2008 had some effect on migration, the FIGURE 5.11 Percentage of rural labor employed off the farm, 1995–2011 70 60 50 % of workforce

348

40 30 20 10

Migration and off-farm employment Rural to urban migration and the emergence of off-farm employment have been important in China’s transformation over the past two decades. The rise of off-farm employment

0 1995

1999

2003

2007

Complete sample

Source: X. Wang, Huang, and Rozelle 2013.

2011


349

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

Age cohort

Total

Male

Female

16–20 21–30 31–40 41–50 51–60 61 and above

77.0 77.6 74.3 59.5 38.4 26.2

81.3 92.3 88.4 79.0 55.4 37.2

72.0 62.1 58.7 39.4 21.4 13.7

FIGURE 5.12 Manufacturing wages, 1994–2008 4,500

4,231

4,000 3,500

US$ per year

TABLE 5.4 Proportion of rural laborers working off-the-farm, by age cohort, 2011

3,481 2,849

3,000 2,338

2,500 2,000

Source: X. Wang, Huang, and Rozelle 2013.

1,638

2,018

1,500 1,000

impact was short-lived (Chan 2010; Huang and others 2011). In 2011, off-farm labor force participation was in the range of 80–90 percent for male workers below the age of 40 and between 60 percent and 70 percent for female workers (table 5.4).

1,180 1,075

497

481

500 0

2,833

433

367

1994

1998 China

India

2002

2006

Philippines

Thailand

2008

Source: Li and others 2012.

Rural wages T he average wage earned by China’s unskilled rural laborers remained fairly stable until the late 1990s but then started to increase (Li and others 2012; see figure 5.12). Hourly wages for migrant workers increased by 32 percent between 2001 and 2005 (Cai and Wang 2010). Despite China’s regional heterogeneity, wage differentials for rural migrants have been observed to be small across rich, medium, and poor counties (table 5.5). Remarkably, there is at most a 10 percent gap in average wages between counties, indicating that China’s labor markets may no longer be very fragmented and that further pressure on agricultural labor costs is likely across the country. For example, wage earners from the heavily industrialized Jiangsu province earned an average hourly wage of RMB 11 in 2011, only 10 percent higher than that of a worker in the relatively undeveloped Sichuan or Shaanxi provinces (RMB 10). The wage gap is equally narrow when comparing wage earners from sample regions in eastern, central, and western China.

Agricultural mechanization With the introduction of the Household Responsibility System in 1979, which allowed rural households to contract collective farmland for private profit-oriented farming, the level of farm mechanization initially

TABLE 5.5 Hourly wage rate of rural migrant workers across regions in 2011 Hourly wage (RMB) Location

By province Jiangsu Sichuan Shaanxi Jilin Hebei By region East Central West By county economic level First quintile (highest GVIO) Second quintile Third quintile Fourth quintile Fifth quintile (lowest GVIO) By job location Own county Outside county Other province Total number of observations

Sample

Mean

Sd.

612 559 549 393 413

11 10 11 11 10

8 10 10 9 8

612 806 1,108

11 10 10

8 9 10

494 555 483 482 512

11 11 10 10 11

10 9 8 7 11

1,248 636 642 2,526

10 11 12

9 8 10

Source: X. Wang, Huang, and Rozelle 2013. Note: GVIO = gross value of industrial output.

decreased because households made more use of hand labor and draught animals at the farm level rather than renting costly machinery from the collectives. Between 1979 and


350

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 5.13 Trends in mechanical operation, 1970–2011

80 70 60 50 40

Percent

Ha (millions)

a. Mechanical plowing 110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0

30 20 10 0 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Year

Mechanically plowing area (left axis)

The share of mechanically plowing area to total cultivated area (right axis)

b. Mechanical sowing 80

50

70

45 40 35

50

30

40

25

30

20

Percent

Ha (millions)

60

15

20

10

10

5 0

0 1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

Year Mechanically sowing area (left axis)

1983, the area of mechanically plowed land declined by around 8 million hectares. But as off-farm employment become prominent in the 1990s, China’s farmers restarted mechanization. Over the past two decades, the area of land mechanically plowed has doubled, growing at an annual rate of more than 3 percent. In 2011 more than 72 percent of cultivated land was plowed mechanically. Mechanically sown areas doubled during the 1990s while those with mechanical harvesting almost tripled. In 2011, more than 40 percent of cultivated land was mechanically sown and harvested (figure 5.13). The process of mechanization is driven by changes in relative prices, particularly the wage rate of off-farm labor. Average onfarm labor cost grew by 8 percent annually between 1997 and 2008, and wage growth has since accelerated to more than 10 percent (figure 5.14). Wage growth in the manufacturing sector and expansion of mechanization in agriculture have been on similar trend paths, in line with findings for developed countries, such as Japan and Korea (Otsuka 2013). Investments in agricultural machinery and migration are also closely related (de Brauw and Rozelle 2008; Li and others 2012; Taylor, Rozelle, and de Brauw 2003). Labor-saving technology allows labor to be used for nonfarm activities and to access new sources of income. It also changes the

The share of mechanically sowing area to total sown area (right axis)

FIGURE 5.14 Average daily cost of on-farm labor, 1997–2012

c. Mechanical harvesting 70

45 40

60

50

30

40

25

30

20 15

20

10 10

5

0

0 1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

Source: X. Wang, Huang, and Rozelle 2013.

40 30 20 10 0

Year Mechanically reaping area (left axis)

Percent

Ha (millions)

50

RMB per day (constant 2005 prices)

35

The share of mechanically reaping area to total sown area (right axis)

1997

2000

2003

2006

2009

2012

Source: National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) Cost and Revenue in Agricultural Production database.


351

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

FIGURE 5.15 Trends in labor input by commodity, 1997–2012 80 70

day/mu

60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1997

2000

2003

Rice Soybean Sugarcane

2006 Wheat Rapeseed Apple

2009

2012

Corn Cotton Vegetable

Source: NDRC Cost and Revenue in Agricultural Production database.

FIGURE 5.16 Expenditures on mechanization by commodity, 1997–2012 140 120 100 RMB/mu

composition of the labor input in production. Under pressure from on-farm labor costs, the number of days that China’s farmers have devoted to on-farm work has fallen substantially. By the mid-2000s, the average labor days per hectare had fallen to less than 100 days per hectare, less than half the amount used in the 1990s (de Brauw and others 2013). In grain production, the labor input in 2012 was less than half of that in 1997. In soybean production, the number of total working days on one unit of land (mu, a Chinese unit equivalent to about 667 square meters) was only three days in 2012. Even for labor-intensive crops, such as cotton, vegetables, and fruit, on-farm work days have declined at an annual rate of 2–4 percent (figure 5.15). Mechanization has increased rapidly across all crops, particularly after 2003. Measured by expense per mu (RMB/ mu) and as a share of expenses on machinery to total input (excluding labor and land), China’s smallholders are increasingly substituting agricultural machinery for labor to organize farm production (figures 5.16 and 5.17). Small-size machinery generally dominates current mechanization trends, as a consequence of small farm sizes, land fragmentation, and weak land rental markets that slow down consolidation. Privately operated machinery services, so-called specialized custom plowers, planters and harvesters teams, have emerged widely across China. In some areas, mechanization and technological improvements that raise yields will allow agriculture to retain labor. In other areas, where mechanization is more difficult, it will be difficult to adjust to higher wage rates. The shift in labor input in agricultural production also shows clear gender traits. Female labor on average dominated in both rice and wheat production from 2002 to 2010, except 2010 (in wheat production). Female farmers work more days on-farm than male farmers across all farm activities, including sowing, spraying pesticide, and weeding. Despite the overall reduction in on-farm labor input, there are clear signs that China’s smallholder agricultural production has become more dominated by female farmers since the early 2000s (de Brauw and others 2013).

80 60 40 20 0 1997

2000 Rice Soybean Sugarcane

2003

2006 Wheat Rapeseed Apple

2009 Corn Cotton Vegetable

Source: NDRC Cost and Revenue in Agricultural Production database.

Under the government’s agricultural mechanization policy, subsidies for agricultural machinery increased dramatically from RMB 0.07 billion in 2004 to RMB 21.5 billion in 2012. On average, 7.3 percent of the total purchase price of farm machinery is covered by government subsidies (table 5.6). However, machinery purchase is motivated less by government subsidies and more by

2012


352

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 5.17 Share of mechanization expenditure to total expenditure on physical input by different crops, 1997–2012 40 35 30 Percent

25 20 15 10 5 0 1997

2000 Rice Soybean Sugarcane

2003

2006 Wheat Rapeseed Apple

2009

2012

Corn Cotton Vegetable

Source: NDRC Cost and Revenue in Agricultural Production database.

the need to save labor and to allow household members remaining in the countryside to transfer their labor to other activities.

Urbanization, arable land, and land productivity One of the links between urbanization and agriculture that has received the most attention is the conversion of agricultural into urban land. This process is very complex, involving higher-density urban living areas replacing lower density rural living areas, the transfer of land from agricultural to urban uses, and even new land entering agriculture. A key issue in making an assessment is the need to compare the productivity of different

types of land. China has succeeded in retaining sufficient arable land for agricultural production and in supplying land for urbanization at the same time. But China has also experienced significant changes in its arable land over the past two decades, with both the conversion of agricultural land to urban and industrial uses and the conversion of nonfarmland into arable land, which requires careful analysis of the aggregate combined effects. Overall, the changes in total arable land area have slightly reduced China’s agricultural production potential (or bioproductivity), as high-value farmland in eastern coastal provinces was converted to nonagricultural use while other land, often of lower quality, was reclaimed for farming in other regions of China. Between 1988 and 2000, China recorded a net increase of cultivated land of 1.9 percent, which almost offset the decrease of 2.2 percent in agricultural production potential (bioproductivity) through land conversion. During this period, 3.06 million hectares of farmland were converted to nonfarm uses, accounting for 2.2 percent of China’s total cultivated land (figure 5.18). The annual average conversion rate was 0.16 percent over this period. About 38 percent (or 1.2 million hectares; 0.08 percent of total cultivated land) of this land was converted to built-up areas, 17 percent was converted to forestland, 30 percent to grassland, and 16 percent to other types of land. At the same time, 5.7 million hectares of new farmland was created, a gross expansion of 4.1 percent. Grassland conversion accounted for 55 percent of the newly created cultivated land, forestland for 28 percent, and reclaimed wetland or wasteland for around 17 percent. Overall, China’s agricul-

TABLE 5.6 Machinery subsidies in China, 2008

Categories

Lower quartile (< RMB 60 ) Median (RMB 60–400 ) 3rd quartile (RMB 400–2,055 ) Upper quartile (> RMB 2,055) Overall Source: X. Wang, Huang, and Rozelle 2013.

Households that purchased machinery

Average expenditure on machinery (RMB)

Number of households with machinery Subsidies

59 50 53 54 216

42.9 176.6 1,078.9 8,366.5 2,408.9

0 0 1 6 7

Machinery subsidy (RMB)

0.0 0.0 400.0 3,313.3 2,897.1

Proportion of subsidy to total expense (%)

0.0 0.0 44.4 24.4 7.3


CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

FIGURE 5.18 Land conversion trends, 1988–2000

FIGURE 5.19 Land conversion trends, 2000–08

Unused land

Unused land

Built-up area

Built-up area

Water area

Water area

Grassland

Grassland

Forestry area

Forestry area

Total

Total –2 –1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Ha (millions) Cultivated land being converted to: Cultivated land being converted from: Net change

–1.0

–0.5

0

0.5

1.0

1.5

Ha (millions) Cultivated land being converted to: Cultivated land being converted from: Net change

Source: Deng, Huang, and Rozelle 2013.

Source: Deng, Huang, and Rozelle 2013.

tural production potential declined slightly by 0.3 percent between 1988 and 2000. In comparison, from 2000 to 2008, total cultivated land area decreased by 0.47 percent, and agricultural production potential declined by 1.70 percent. A total of 1.24 million hectares of farmland was converted to nonagricultural use, at an annual rate of 0.16 million hectares. At the same time, 0.66 million hectares of farmland was newly created, resulting in a net loss of 0.58 million hectares of cultivated land (figure 5.19). Compared to the previous period, the share of cultivated land converted into built-up areas to total land conversion increased significantly. A large share of the conversion of farmland to nonfarm uses, particularly in built-up areas, has occurred in China’s coastal provinces and around large cities. The municipalities of Beijing and Shanghai and Zhejiang province saw conversion rates above 5 percent during 1986–2000. But since these jurisdictions are small in comparison to other provinces, the loss of farmland represented less than 0.2 percent of China’s total cultivated area. During 2000–08, Shanghai and Shandong experienced the highest conversion rates and net loss in farmland. Chengdu, Chongqing, Xian, and other provincial capitals also

saw high conversion rates to urban industrial, infrastructure, and residential uses. During the same period, large areas of farmland, often farmland of marginal productivity in upland areas, was converted to forested areas in the course of the government’s National Slopeland Conversion Program. During 1988–2000, large tracts of wetlands and other noncultivated lands were converted to farmland in northeast China, especially in Heilongjiang province. Compared to this period, fewer tracts of land were converted to cultivated land during 2000–08, as maps 5.2 through 5.5 show. Such conversion slowed considerably although additional farmland was still created in northwestern China, the western parts of Xinjiang, and Heilongjiang. Overall, China’s agricultural production potential has changed as a result of the conversion of various types of land of varying soil quality conditions into and out of cultivation across the different regions of China (box 5.1). During 1988–2000, the impact of land conversion on China’s agricultural production potential was negligible but after 2000, the net change in potential agricultural productivity became more important. Between 2000 and 2008, aggregated for China’s total

353


354

URBAN CHINA

MAP 5.2 Land conversion: From cultivated land to other uses, 1988–2008

Heilongjiang Jilin Xinjiang Nei

gol

Mon

Liaoning

BEIJING

Tianjin

Hebei Shanxi

Ningxia

Shandong

Qinghai Gansu

Henan

Shaanxi

Jiangsu

Xizang Hubei

Sichuan

Shanghai

Anhui

Zhejiang

Chongqing

Cultivated land converted to:

Fujian Taiwan

Yunnan

Grassland

Jiangxi

Hunan

Guizhou

Forestry area

Guangdong Hong Kong SAR Macao SAR

Guangxi

Water area Built-up area

Hainan

Unused land no data

IBRD 40999 | JUNE 2014 This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries.

MAP 5.3 Land conversion: From cultivated land to other uses, 2000–08

Heilongjiang Jilin Xinjiang Nei

gol

Mon

Liaoning

BEIJING

Hebei Ningxia

Shanxi

Qinghai Gansu

Tianjin Shandong

Henan

Shaanxi Xizang

Hubei

Sichuan

Jiangsu

Zhejiang

Chongqing

Cultivated land converted to: Guizhou

Forestry area Grassland

Yunnan

Water area

Hunan

no data

IBRD 41000 | JUNE 2014 This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries.

Jiangxi Fujian Taiwan

Guangxi

Guangdong Hong Kong SAR Macao SAR

Built-up area Unused land

Shanghai

Anhui

Hainan

cultivated area, the total production potential fell by 32.9 billion kcal, or by around 1.7 percent, as compared to only 5.8 billion kcal (or 0.3 percent) during 1988–2000) (table 5.7). About 97 percent of the decrease in agricultural production potential between 2000 and 2008 was due to the conversion of highquality cultivated land to built-up areas. This high percentage is because mostly high quality (plain) farmland was being converted to nonfarming uses. The decline in production potential was also because much of this land is located in southeastern and eastern provinces where climatic conditions allow for two planting seasons per year. Land in the south and east is also less steep and receives more precipitation. Developed areas in the North China Plain, including Beijing and Tianjin municipalities, also experienced large declines in production potential (figure 5.20). The recent conversion of cultivated land into built-up areas has not compromised China’s ability to feed itself. China has also retained its capacity to improve agricultural production through conversion of nonfarmland into farmland and through increasing yields and productivity on existing cultivated land. From the perspective of China’s national food security, a ban on land conversion is not warranted. However, rural land conversions rates have continued and even accelerated during the past five years (2008–12) and pressure on China’s farmland resources will inevitably continue as the conversion of cultivated land to other uses continues in the urbanization process. Simulation results indicate that a 1 percentage point increase in China’s urbanization rate will cause a decline of 0.065 percent of China’s cultivated area and a 0.067 percent decline in China’s agricultural production potential. In general, the conversion of land for purposes of higher economic value than agriculture is a natural element of the urbanization process. China therefore needs careful management and planning to facilitate more rational land use in both the short and long term, given the likely pressures to continue to convert land. Good development policy, in general, and food policy, in particular, will not demand halting the conversion of cultivated land but rather require that the process


355

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

of conversion is done rationally and that the productivity of the remaining resources in the agricultural sector is improved.

MAP 5.4 Land conversion: From other uses to cultivated land, 1988–2000

Supply, changing consumption, and demand Projecting agricultural production, output, and supply under urbanization Despite resource constraints, the aggregate effects of China’s urbanization on the domestic production of major agricultural products are projected to be modest. China’s urban population is projected to reach 67 percent of the total population by 2030, increasing by roughly 1 percentage point per year. Urbanization will affect the availability of agricultural production factors, such as water, land, and labor and will have an impact on agricultural production, in various ways, as discussed in the previous section. China’s agriculture will also face challenges associated with high environmental pollution levels. A one percentage point increase in China’s urban population—after taking into account the combined effects of urbanization on agricultural water distribution and availability, arable land loss through conversion and changes in bioproductivity, rising rural wages, and other factors—is projected to result in a 0.18 percent decrease in total domestic grain output to 2020 (table 5.8). Water redistribution between sectors, farmland conversion, and rising labor costs will contribute equally to this decrease in grain output. As China’s urban population rises to 67 percent by 2030 (from 52 percent in 2012) total domestic grain output is projected to decline by about 2.7 percent from 2012 levels. The impact of resource constraints will vary from crop to crop. Domestic rice production will suffer most, with output declining by 0.34 percent to 2020 for each 1 percentage point increase in the urban population, mainly because of the change in water distribution, which contributes nearly three quarters to the fall in output. Outputs of wheat and corn are projected to decrease slightly, by 0.17 percent and 0.18 percent respectively, by 2020 against the 2012 base-

Heilongjiang Jilin Xinjiang Nei

gol

Mon

Liaoning

BEIJING

Tianjin

Hebei Shanxi

Ningxia

Shandong

Qinghai Gansu

Henan

Shaanxi

Jiangsu

Xizang Hubei

Sichuan

Shanghai

Anhui

Zhejiang

Chongqing

Cultivated land converted from:

Fujian Taiwan

Yunnan

Grassland

Jiangxi

Hunan

Guizhou

Forestry area

Guangdong Hong Kong SAR Macao SAR

Guangxi

Water area Built-up area

Hainan

Unused land no data

IBRD 41001 | JUNE 2014 This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries.

MAP 5.5 Land conversion: From other uses to cultivated land, 2000–08

Heilongjiang Jilin Xinjiang Nei

gol

Mon

Liaoning

BEIJING

Hebei Ningxia

Shanxi

Qinghai Gansu

Tianjin Shandong

Henan

Shaanxi Xizang

Hubei

Sichuan

Jiangsu

Zhejiang

Chongqing

Cultivated land converted to: Guizhou

Forestry area Grassland

Yunnan

Water area

Hunan

Guangxi

no data

IBRD 41002 | JUNE 2014 This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries.

Jiangxi Fujian

Guangdong Hong Kong SAR Macao SAR

Built-up area Unused land

Shanghai

Anhui

Hainan

Taiwan


356

URBAN CHINA

BOX 5.1

Agro-ecological zones methodology

In addition to estimates of the quantity of the cultivated land conversion, another technique is to estimate changes in the potential productivity of cultivated land. The Agro-Ecological Zones (AEZ) methodology is a commonly used method of calculating potential productivity. As with any of the alternative methods for estimating potential productivity, a number of assumptions are needed about the crops or mix of crops that can be produced on each plot of land. In this study, the following classification system of land use categories was used: • Cultivated land. Original data include both paddy and nonirrigated uplands, which is aggregated into total cultivated land for this study. • Forestry area. Natural or planted forests with canopy covers greater than 30 percent; land covered by trees less than 2 meters high with a canopy cover greater than 40 percent; land covered by trees with canopy cover between 10 percent and 30 percent; and land used for tea gardens, orchards, and nurseries.

• Grassland. Lands covered by herbaceous plants with coverage greater than 5 percent and mixed rangeland with coverage of shrub canopies of less than 10 percent. • Water area. Land covered by natural water bodies or land with facilities for irrigation and water reservation, including rivers, canals, lakes, permanent glaciers, beaches and shorelines, and others. • Built-up area. Land used for urban and rural settlements, industry, and transportation. • Unused land. All remaining land. Data inconsistencies should be expected because during the past three decades a number of different agencies have had responsibility for managing China’s land. Without access to quality data from traditional statistical databases, this study relies on methods that use Landsat Thematic Mapper/Enhanced Thematic Mapper (TM/ETM) data to generate estimates of changes in land quantity and quality.

TABLE 5.7 Change in total production potential by province, 2000–08

Province

Beijing Tianjin Hebei Shanxi Inner Mongolia Liaoning Jilin Heilongjiang Shanghai Jiangsu Zhejiang Anhui Fujian Jiangxi Shandong Henan Hubei

Total production potential in 2000

Increase (billion kcal)

Decrease (billion kcal)

Net change (billion kcal)

Percentage change

3,306 6,029 7,1046 34,631 39,410 34,965 32,929 58,986 8,160 109,240 66,373 135,361 47,871 105,507 96,332 111,160 147,401

3.4 1.9 122.6 1.4 460.6 40.6 71.9 1,380.2 0.0 28.0 15.7 535.9 18.0 633.2 166.4 99.3 31.9

280.8 139.7 914.9 798.4 118.8 221.4 155.8 802.8 1,993.9 8,319.2 1,673.6 3,594.5 1,220.3 1,060.9 2,967.0 1,243.1 2,371.1

−277.3 −137.8 −792.3 −797.0 341.7 −180.9 −83.9 577.4 −1,993.9 −8,291.2 −1,657.9 −3,058.6 −1,202.3 −427.6 −2,800.6 −1,143.8 −2,339.3

−8.39 −2.29 −1.12 −2.30 0.87 −0.52 −0.25 0.98 −24.43 −7.59 −2.50 −2.26 −2.51 −0.41 −2.91 −1.03 −1.59

Province

Hunan Guangdong Guangxi Hainan Chongqing Sichuan Guizhou Yunnan Tibet Shaanxi Gansu Qinghai Ningxia Xinjiang Taiwan, China Total

Total production potential in 2000

Increase (billion kcal)

Decrease (billion kcal)

Net change (billion kcal)

Percentage change

140,173 87,407 113,488 15,939 55,991 175,027 63,814 67,706 1,937 40,855 32,379 2,854 9,632 30,567 13,437

2.0 37.5 31.5 23.0 23.7 68.9 27.6 94.4 0.0 170.1 316.6 4.6 249.4 1,781.6 69.0

1,215.1 2,164.7 787.1 131.1 2,111.1 1,553.0 1,103.9 981.6 1.3 550.1 408.1 21.6 215.2 46.1 181.8

−1,213.0 −2,127.2 −755.7 −108.1 −2,087.3 −1,484.1 −1,076.3 −887.2 −1.3 −380.1 −91.5 −17.0 34.2 1,735.6 −174.9

−0.87 −2.43 −0.67 −0.68 −3.73 −0.85 −1.69 −1.31 −0.07 −0.93 −0.28 −0.59 0.35 5.68 −1.30

1,959,913

6,449

39,348

−32,899

−1.68


357

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

FIGURE 5.20 Changes in agricultural production potential, 2000–08

Forestry area Grassland Water area Built-up area

0 5,0 00 10 ,00 0

–4

5,0 00 0,0 0 –3 0 5,0 0 –3 0 0,0 0 –2 0 5,0 0 –2 0 0,0 0 –1 0 5,0 0 –1 0 0,0 00 –5 ,00 0

Unused land

–4

line. Soybean output, in contrast, is expected to increase by 1.63 percent. Negative effects on total soybean output caused by decreasing arable land availability and escalating labor costs (−0.33 percent) are expected to be offset by water redistribution to soybean production, in response to high returns from soy production. Vegetable oil, sugar, vegetable, and fruit output will also be affected, but output declines are projected to be modest. For every 1 percentage point increase in the urban population, domestic output will decline by 0.36 percent for vegetable oil, 0.30 percent for sugar, 0.13 percent for vegetables, and 0.1 percent for fruit. Vegetable oil and sugar will suffer more than vegetables and fruit mainly because of water redistribution away from agriculture. Lower water availability will drive vegetable oil and sugar outputs down by 0.19 percent and 0.13 percent, respectively, while the impact on vegetables and fruit will be small. By 2030, the cumulative impact of urbanization on these agricultural goods will be between 1.5 percent and 5.4 percent. Animal production and aquaculture will experience relatively little impact. Urbanization will cause livestock and aquaculture production to decrease by 0.11 percent and 0.14 percent respectively, for every 1 percentage point increase in China’s urban population. From 2012 to 2030, the total impact of urbanization on animal and aquaculture products will be a decrease in output of between 1.7 percent and 2.0 percent. The main driver of declining output in the livestock sector will be rising labor costs. The structural and quantitative changes in China’s food production will require additional food imports, driven mainly by imports of feed grains, especially corn. Imports of rice and wheat are projected to be modest given the decline in overall per person demand for these grains by 2030. China’s needs for imports of agricultural products are within the capacity of China’s existing trade partners for maize, soybeans, and dairy products. Urbanization impacts on agriculture will lead to slightly higher imports of agriculture products and reduce China’s food selfsufficiency. However, overall reliance on

kcal (billions) Decrease due to cultivated land being converted to:

Increase due to cultivated land being converted from:

Net changes

Source: Deng and others 2013.

TABLE 5.8 Impact of a 1 percentage point increase in China’s urbanization rate on China’s domestic food production to 2020 Decomposition of impacts of urbanization

Food

Grains Rice Wheat Corn Soybeans Vegetable oils Sugar Vegetables Fruits Pork Beef Poultry Dairy products Fishery products

Total impacts

Water resource constraints usage

Farmland conversion

Rising labor cost

−0.18 −0.34 −0.17 −0.18 1.31 −0.36 −0.30 −0.13 −0.10 −0.11 −0.11 −0.12 −0.14 −0.11

−0.06 −0.25 −0.09 −0.02 1.64 −0.19 −0.13 −0.03 0.00 −0.01 0.00 −0.01 −0.01 0.00

−0.06 −0.04 −0.04 −0.07 −0.20 −0.10 −0.09 −0.06 −0.06 −0.02 −0.01 −0.03 −0.02 −0.01

−0.07 −0.05 −0.04 −0.09 −0.13 −0.07 −0.08 −0.05 −0.04 −0.09 −0.09 −0.09 −0.12 −0.10

Source: CAPSiM results.

imports will be small and serious concerns about China’s food self-sufficiency do not seem warranted (table 5.9). Urbanization leads to lower domestic output of many agricultural products, as well as to higher prices and decreased international competitiveness.


358

URBAN CHINA

TABLE 5.9 China’s supply and demand of agricultural products in 2012, 2020, and 2030 Thousands of tons Major grains Indicator

2012 Sown area Production Inventory change Import Export Net import Total demand Food demand Per capita food demand (kg/person) Fodder grain demand Seed demand Industrial demand Waste Self-sufficiency rate (percent) 2020 Sown area Production Import Export Net import Total demand Food demand Per capita food demand (kg/person) Fodder grain demand Seed demand Industrial demand Waste Self-sufficiency rate (percent) 2030 Sown area Production Import Export Net import Total demand Food demand Per capita food demand (kg/person) Fodder grain demand Seed demand Industrial demand Waste Self-sufficiency rate (percent)

Graina

Rice

Wheat

Corn

Soybeanb

111,267 589,570 72,152 86,890 2,830 84,060 601,477 316,804 445.3 158,048 12,517 90,202 23,907 87.5

30,244 142,965 27,683 2,369 279 2,090 117,372 95,727 70.9 6,283 2,219 7,055 6,088 98.6

24,421 120,580 11,595 3,701 0 3,701 112,686 72,648 53.8 18,398 5,757 11,318 4,564 97.0

33,842 208,190 14,863 5,208 257 4,951 198,278 15,791 11.7 119,986 1640 53,000 7861 97.7

7,407 13,600 7,027 67,530 385 67,145 73,718 71,560 53.0 656 688 719 94 16.8

101,968 568,122 108,918 3,086 105,832 673,954 337,018 479.3 191,754 12,324 109,875 22,983 84.3

24,953 120,449 1,244 531 712 121,161 99,656 70.9 5,525 2,184 7,947 5,849 99.4

21,536 110,339 2,628 0 2,628 112,967 71,090 50.6 18,503 5,666 13,323 4,385 97.7

33,561 224,070 19,794 140 19,654 243,724 10,857 7.7 155,896 1,627 67,791 7,552 91.9

7,424 14,966 79,536 327 79,209 94,175 91,800 65.3 738 677 868 92 15.9

94,939 563,021 140,413 3,168 137,245 700,267 318,224 491.0 208,466 12,086 139,612 21,879 80.4

21,874 109,314 1,079 613 466 109,781 88,844 62.3 4,010 2,140 9,223 5,563 99.6

19,355 102,729 2,459 0 2,459 105,188 63,072 44.2 16,929 5,554 15,462 4,171 97.7

33,642 243,298 42,096 97 41,999 285,296 6,629 4.7 178,769 1,611 91,105 7,183 85.3

6,858 14,972 89,472 290 89,181 104,153 101,613 71.3 729 664 1,058 89 14.4

Source: CAPSiM results. Note: kg/person = kilograms per person.

As a result, China’s agricultural imports will increase, and exports will decrease. However, the projected increases in imports for rice, wheat, and other products (except soybeans) will be small (table 5.10). Grain import vol-

ume is projected to increase by 275,000 tons for each percentage point increase in China’s urban population, which is small relative to the current total imports of 105.8 million tons, annually.


359

CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

Rural-to-urban migration: Changing per capita food consumption patterns China’s urbanization will affect food demand through income growth resulting from economic growth and development, as discussed earlier. Urbanization will also, of course, involve the migration of rural residents to urban areas. How will consumption patterns of rural residents change as they enter the cities? What effects will rural-tourban migration have on food consumption? Food consumption patterns differ between urban and rural residents in China. Food grain consumption (at home) in rural areas is higher than in urban areas at the same level of income. Urban residents consume less rice, wheat, and other grains but consume substantially more dairy products, eggs, edible oils, fruit, and vegetables than rural residents. But food consumption data does not show marked differences in consumption of poultry, beef, mutton, and aquaculture products between rural and urban areas (figure 5.21). Food consumption per capita in both rural and urban areas is generally underestimated because current data4 describe only consumption patterns at home but do not reflect consumption away from home. From 2000 to 2010, consumption data indicate that per capita food grain consumption of urban residents decreased by 1 percent, from 82.3 kg to 81.5 kg. Per capita grain consumption of rural residents decreased by a much greater amount over the same period, from 250 kg to 181 kg, or by 28 percent. According to national statistics, per capita pork consumption of urban residents remained nearly constant from 2005 (20 kg) to 2011 (21 kg), whereas consumption in rural areas decreased by nearly 8 percent from 16 kg (2005) to 14 kg (NSBC 2011). Notwithstanding population growth, such decreases in consumption, however, contrast with China’s continuously increasing grain (rice, wheat) output and imports over the past decade. Domestic pork production, however, grew by 11 percent, while imports grew from 295,000 tons in 2005 to 387,000 tons in 2011. When comparing consumption with supply (production plus import), China’s pork consump-

TABLE 5.10 Impact of a 1 percentage point increase in China’s urban population on China’s international trade to 2020 Export

Grains Rice Wheat Corn Soybean Vegetable oils Sugar Vegetables Fruits Pork Beef Poultry Dairy products Fishery products

Import

Percent

1,000 tons

Percent

1,000 tons

Net import (1,000 tons)

−0.93 −2.83 −1.94 −0.57 0.12 −0.87 −0.90 −0.69 −0.58 −0.46 −1.00 −0.48 −0.23 −0.30

−26.69 −14.6 0.0 −0.8 0.4 −0.2 −0.6 −44.5 −21.2 −0.3 0.0 −0.9 −0.1 −9.2

0.23 2.75 1.89 1.18 –0.11 0.88 0.87 0.70 0.60 0.46 0.95 0.50 0.20 0.27

248.58 35.2 50.9 233.5 −95.8 17.8 26.3 4.5 25.3 3.4 1.6 0.3 23.6 8.1

275.3 49.8 50.9 234.3 −96.2 18.0 26.9 49.1 46.5 3.7 1.6 1.2 23.7 17.3

Source: CAPSiM results.

tion has increased by 12.5 percent during 2005–11. Such inconsistencies—constant or slightly increasing consumption per capita against fast output growth and imports— also exist for other agricultural commodities. Analyzing food consumption away from home helps explain these inconsistencies. Food consumption of urban residents has increased substantially over the past 10 years, if consumption away from home is taken in account. Expenditure on consumption away from home has risen markedly with increasing urban incomes, and consumption away from home has become an important component of consumption of urban residents. According to survey data on food consumption in six large cities during 2007–11, 5 expenditure on urban residents’ food consumption away from home accounts for 35 percent of total food expenditure, whereas consumption away from home accounts for between 20 and 30 percent of total food consumption. Food consumption also clearly differs according to whether an urban resident is at home or away from home. Urban residents consume more meat and beverages at home, but fewer fruits and vegetables when they eat out (figure 5.22). Similar shares can be expected for rural areas, possibly confirming that real consumption has been underestimated.


URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 5.21 Per capita consumption of various agricultural products in response to income growth

250 200 150 100 50 0 5

10

15

20

25

0

15 10 5 0 10

15

20

25

0

5

10

15

20

Per capita consumption (kg)

30 20 10 0 0

5

10

15

20

Per capita consumption (kg)

h. Aquatic product

3 0 10

15

20

25

30

40 30 20 10 0 0

Per capita income (1,000/RMB)

Source: J. Huang and others 2013. Note: Rural family population—live more than six months.

5

10

15

20

Per capita income (1,000/RMB) Rural

30

40

g. Egg

6

25

0

Per capita income (1,000/RMB)

9

5

5

Per capita income (1,000/RMB)

12

30

10

30

15

25

15

f. Milk

25

30

20

e. Edible oil

20

25

25

Per capita income (1,000/RMB)

15

30

30

Per capita income (1,000/RMB)

10

25

35

30

16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0

0

20

d. Beef

20

5

15

c. Poultry

25

0

10

Per capita income (1,000/RMB)

30

5

5

Per capita income (1,000/RMB)

35

0

35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0

30

Per capita consumption (kg)

Per capita consumption (kg)

0

Per capita consumption (kg)

b. Pork Per capita consumption (kg)

Per capita consumption (kg)

a. Cereal

Per capita consumption (kg)

360

Urban


CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

FIGURE 5.22 Food consumption at home and away from home for urban residents by income a. Expenditure

b. Quantity

200

14 12 10 kg/person

RMB/person

150

100

8 2 4

50

2 0

0 Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q5

Q1

Per capita income by quintile

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q5

Per capita income by quintile

c. Grain

d. Meat

3.0

1.6 1.4

2.5 kg/person/week

kg/person/week

1.2 2.0 1.5 1.0

1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4

0.5

0.2

0

0 Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q5

Q1

Per capita income by quintile

Q2

e. Aquatic

Q4

Q5

f. Vegetables

0.6

1.8

0.5

1.6 kg/person/week

RMB/person

Q3

Per capita income by quintile

0.4 0.5 0.2

1.2 0.8 0.4

0.1 0

0 Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q5

Per capita income by quintile Food consumed away from home

Source: Bai and others 2013. Note: The poorest quintile is Q1; the richest quintile is Q5.

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Per capita income by quintile Food consumed at home

Q5

361


362

URBAN CHINA

Projecting aggregate food demand and supply gaps under urbanization China’s food consumption and production are projected to stabilize after 2030 (box 5.2). By 2030, China’s aggregate food self-sufficiency will remain at above 90 percent. Per capita food consumption will continue to grow rapidly over the next two decades, with relatively faster growth during the coming decade, driven by income growth. Per capita consumption of food grains such as rice and wheat will continue to decline, while consumption of edible oils, sugar, vegetables, fruit, and animal and aquaculture products will increase markedly with increasing incomes. Growing demand for higher-value meat, eggs, and dairy products present challenges for the domestic supply of animal feed, in particular feed grains. The rising demand for feed grains

BOX 5.2

will put pressure on China’s aggregate food demand and supply balance. Domestic production shortages of soybeans, corn, edible oils, sugar, and dairy products will increase further because of demand growth and resource constraints in the next 20 years.

Grains China’s aggregate demand for grain is expected to grow significantly faster than domestic production. Total demand for grains is projected to increase from 600 million tons per year currently to 670 million tons in 2020 and 700 million tons in 2030. Annual grain production, in comparison, will grow at a much slower pace than demand, reaching 568 million tons by 2020 and 563 million tons by 2030. Per capita annual grain consumption is projected to grow from 445

China Agricultural Policy Simulation Model (CAPSiM)

This study uses the China Agricultural Policy Simulation Model (CAPSiM), developed by the Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, to analyze the effects of China’s urbanization on domestic food production and food demand and forecast a supply-demand balance for major agricultural products for the next two decades, until 2030. CAPSiM covers 14 crops (rice, wheat, corn, sweet potatoes, potatoes, other coarse grains, soybeans, cotton, oil crops, sugar crops, vegetables, fruit, squash, and others); and nine categories of livestock products (pork, beef, mutton, poultry, eggs, milk, fish, shrimp, and others). The model builds on the analyses of the effects of urbanization on water for agriculture, land conversion and arable land, labor, migration and rural wages, and technological change. Model simulations are based on the following assumptions: • GDP. China’s economic growth is expected to slow but to maintain comparatively high rates of GDP growth. Assumptions are: 7.5 percent growth for 2012–15); 7 percent for 2016–20; 5.9 percent for 2021–25), and 5.0 percent for 2026–30. • Rural-urban income gap. The rural-urban income gap will gradually narrow. Rural incomes may grow faster than urban incomes. During 2010–12, rural income grew by 11 percent annually, while

urban income grew by 8.6 percent annually. For the 2013–30 period, rural incomes are assumed to maintain an average annual growth rate of 8.3 percent while urban income will grow more slowly, at an assumed average annual rate of 6.8 percent. Population. China’s population growth rate is assumed to be is 0.61 percent from 2012 to 2015, 0.44 percent for 2016–20), 0.22 percent for 2021– 25, and 0.06 percent for 2026–30. Urbanization. China’s urban population will increase from 52 percent of the total population in 2012 to 56 percent in 2015, 60 percent in 2020, 64 percent in 2025, and 67 percent in 2030. Rural labor wage and land rent. Average annual growth of the actual wage of rural labor from 2012 to 2030 is assumed to be 6 percent, while cost of land rental will grow by 2.5 percent. Technological change. It is expected that the government will continue to invest in agricultural research and development. Rising marginal cost for increasing unit production will imply a lower contribution rate of scientific and technological progress.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development-Food and Agriculture Organisation Agricultural Outlook (2013–20) and U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates (2013–22) are the main sources for international agricultural prices.


CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

363

TABLE 5.11 China’s current and projected supply and demand of livestock products in 2012, 2020, and 2030 Thousands of tons

2012 Production Import Export Net import Total consumption Food consumption Per capita food consumption (kg/person) Self-sufficiency rate (percent) 2020 Production Import Export Net import Total consumption Food consumption Per capita food consumption (kg/person) Self-sufficiency rate (percent) 2030 Production Import Export Net import Total consumption Food consumption Per capita food consumption (kg/person) Self-sufficiency rate (percent)

Pork

Beef

Mutton

Poultry

Eggs

Dairy products

Fishery products

46,159 522 66 456 46,615 44,046 32.6 99.0

5,296 49 12 37 5,333 4,919 3.6 99.3

3,409 119 0 119 3,528 3,295 2.4 96.6

17,319 49 181 −131 17,187 16,294 12.1 100.8

19,998 0 61 −61 19,937 19,136 14.2 100.3

38,680 6,181 105 6,076 44,756 44,008 32.6 86.4

33,178 2,208 3,253 −1,045 32,132 29,761 22.0 103.3

56,194 728 65 664 56,858 54,289 38.6 98.8

7,272 165 4 161 7,433 7,019 5.0 97.8

4,384 328 0 328 4,711 4,479 3.2 93.1

22,379 67 180 -113 22,266 21,373 15.2 100.5

23,462 0 47 -47 23,416 22,615 16.1 100.2

56,906 11,725 51 11674 68,580 67,832 48.2 83.0

43,808 2,975 3,298 -323 43,485 41,113 29.2 100.7

61794 897 52 845 62638 60070 42.1 98.7

9046 520 1 518 9564 9150 6.4 94.6

5133 801 0 801 5934 5702 4.0 86.5

25477 87 139 -52 25425 24532 17.2 100.2

24803 0 38 -38 24765 23964 16.8 100.2

68889 21734 25 21709 90598 89850 63.0 76.0

51618 3648 2705 942 52560 50188 35.2 98.2

Source: CAPSiM results. Note: kg/person = kilograms per person.

kg in 2012 to 479 kilograms in 2020 and 491 kilograms in 2030 (table 5.11). China will maintain high domestic selfsufficiency levels for rice and wheat, the most important food grains, but not for feed grains. For rice, self-sufficiency is predicted to remain above 99 percent up to 2030. For wheat, self-sufficiency will remain above 97 percent in 2030. In contrast, China’s selfsufficiency in corn is projected to decrease to 85 percent by 2030 from 98 percent in 2012. Corn production is predicted to reach 220 million tons by 2020 and 243 million tons by 2030 while demand will increase to 240 million tons in 2020 and 285 million tons in 2030, opening a demand-supply gap of 20 million tons by 2020 and 42 million tons by 2030. The domestic supply gap in soybeans (including soybean oil) is projected to grow

further. Imports may reach 80 million tons in 2020 and 90 million tons in 2030, resulting in a self-sufficiency rate for soybeans of only 14 percent (figure 5.23).

Livestock products and fishery products China will be able to balance domestic demand and supply of pork, the most important animal product. It will also remain self-suffi cient in poultry and eggs. In contrast, self-sufficiency levels for beef, mutton, and dairy products will drop significantly. Dairy imports will increase rapidly and selfsufficiency will drop to 76 percent by 2030. As consumption increases, livestock production in China will also see rapid growth. China’s demand for fishery and aquaculture products is expected to surge, but will


364

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 5.23 Projected supply shortages for various food items

Rice Wheat Corn Soybean Edible oil Sugar Vegetables Fruits Pork Beef Mutton Poultry Egg Milk Fish –100

–80

–60

–40

–20

0

20

Percent 2012

2020

2030

Source: Huang and others 2014.

be largely met by increasing domestic production. Per capita annual consumption of aquaculture products, including fish, shrimp, crab and shellfish, will grow from 22 kg today to 29 kg by 2020 and 35 kg by 2030. Domestic production will grow substantially from 33.2 million tons in 2012 to 43.8 million tons in 2020 and 51.6 million tons in 2030. Since the demand for aquaculture will grow slightly faster than production, export growth for aquacultural products will remain small while imports will continue to grow. It is worth noting that low-price fish meal accounts for a significant share of China’s fishery imports. While imports and exports of fish and aquaculture products are of similar quantity, China’s exports have much higher value than its imports. Vegetables and fruit. China has a comparative advantage in fruit and vegetable production, which has grown steadily over the past

decade. It will meet its demand for both and will even be able to increase exports. While rising labor costs will reduce its comparative advantage, China is likely to satisfy its rising domestic demand on vegetables and fruit by further adjusting and expanding domestic production. Vegetable production is projected to grow further, from currently 308 million tons in 2012 to 349 million tons by 2020 and 372 million tons by 2030. Vegetable consumption will also be on an upward trajectory, and increase from 236 million tons in 2012 to 277 million tons by 2020 and 298 million tons by 2030. China will remain a major exporter of vegetables with exports projected to increase from 6.1 million tons to 8.6 million tons by 2030. China’s production and consumption of fruit will also grow significantly, and imports and exports will both increase. Production is predicted to increase from 162 million tons in 2012 to 193 million tons by 2020 to 219 million tons by 2030. Fruit consumption will grow from 163 million tons in 2012 to 194 million tons by 2020 and 218 million tons by 2030. China’s imports of fruit, mainly tropical fruits, are expected to grow from 4 million tons in 2012 to 4.3 million tons in 2020, and then decrease to 3.7 million tons by 2030. Fruit exports, mainly temperate fruits (apples, pears, and citrus fruits) are projected to grow from 3.4 million tons in 2012 to 3.5 million tons in 2020 to 5 million tons in 2030. After 2020, fruit consumption growth will slow down, while production will maintain rapid growth, making China an exporter with a net export of 1.29 million tons of fruits by 2030. Sugar. China’s sugar production is expected to grow slowly against a rapid consumption increase, resulting in a bigger supply shortage. Production is projected to increase from 16 million tons in 2012 to 17 million tons in 2020 and 19 million tons in 2030. Per capita sugar consumption is projected to increase significantly, resulting in a total demand of 20 million tons by 2020 and 23 million tons by 2030, up from 16 million tons in 2012. Imports of sugar are expected to increase from 2.8 million tons in 2012 to 2.9 million tons in 2020 and 4.25 million tons in 2030. By 2030, China is projected to produce 82 percent of its sugar demand domestically.


CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

Oil Crops. The production of and demand for oil crops (other than soybeans) are expected to grow in parallel, although China will face some domestic supply shortage, which will need to be met by imports. Total production of oil crops is expected to rise from 8.7 million tons in 2012 to 10.2 million tons in 2020 and 10.8 million tons in 2030. Domestic demand will continue to grow at a relatively rapid speed, increasing from 10.4 million tons in 2012 to 12.2 million tons in 2020 and 13.1 million tons in 2030. Imports are predicted to increase from 1.4 million tons in 2012 to 2 million tons in 2020 and 2.4 million tons in 2030. China’s self-sufficiency rate in oil crops will decline from 86 percent in 2012 to 82 percent in 2030. Cotton. China’s cotton demand has been growing much faster than its cotton production, with much of this demand being for production of clothing for export, and supply continues to fall short of demand. Demand for cotton will continue to grow rapidly. Total demand is expected to increase from 8 million tons in 2012 to 10 million tons in 2020 and to nearly 13 million tons in 2030. Domestic cotton production and imports in 2020 are both expected to be lower than those of 2012, mainly because of government purchase and stockpiling of cotton in 2012, which contributed to higher prices, higher domestic production, and strong import growth. These effects are expected to dissipate.

Policy recommendations China has established a comprehensive food policy framework with minimum grain purchasing prices at the core, supported by temporary grain reserves, direct food subsidies, grain stock adjustments, and international trade. This framework, along with China’s institutional reforms and productivity growth in the agricultural sector over the past decades, has been critical to China’s food grain security. But these policies have not addressed problems related to distortions in grain prices, policy inefficiencies, obsolete grain circulation and reserve systems, and weak food safety nets, and they therefore need further improvement to meet the challenges of urbanization.

Setting China’s food security objectives Food self-sufficiency may be desirable for a country with a population of 1.3 billion people, but in view of the structural changes in agricultural production and in food consumption that have taken place over the past decades, as well as escalating environmental and resource constraints, China’s current objective of food security in all food categories is neither possible nor necessary. Instead, China should redefine its food security objectives based on the principles of efficiency, openness, and sustainability. Taking environmental capacity and resource constraints into account, China should strive to unlock the potential for increased grain production by improving productivity and market efficiency, thereby projecting a clear and transparent picture of China’s needs for grain imports and exports. China should moderately adapt its food security objective towards maintaining self-sufficiency in food grains while allowing for more imports of nonfood grains and other agricultural products. More emphasis should be placed on food quality and safety, agricultural sustainability, and protection policies for low-income groups. Stronger emphasis should also be placed on improving the environmental sustainability of China’s domestic livestock sector through better protection and management of China’s grassland resources. The fine-tuning of China’s food security objectives needs to be complemented by policy reforms, investments in agricultural water resources management, and rural land and labor market reforms.

Enhancing domestic grain production capacity China has raised agricultural productivity successfully in the past. From 2004 to 2011, total factor productivity grew at a rate of 2 percent annually for all major grain crops and at 3 percent annually for the major vegetable crops. If China is to increase domestic grain production capacity, ensuring continuous productivity growth in agriculture is a priority. Compared to many other countries, China’s potential for increasing labor and land productivity is significant. The potential of productivity growth can be captured

365


366

URBAN CHINA

through promoting economies of scale in agriculture, primarily by increasing the scale of farming operations, and through continued investments in research and development. The process through which labor and land productivity can grow and farmland can be consolidated needs to be carefully coordinated, and the pace of change needs to be carefully controlled. Specifically, the government’s role will be to (a) improve policies that allow rural migrants to become urban citizens, thereby stimulating more permanent migration to urban areas, and (b) create the conditions for consolidated agricultural operations and improved labor productivity in rural areas. The government will need to rationalize the rural land rights system and develop rural land markets and create incentives for a market-based consolidation of farmland to allow modern medium- and large-scale entities, such as commercial grain producers, larger family farms, and specialized cooperatives, to emerge. Steady productivity growth in grain production requires continued technological advancements in agriculture. The key drivers for technological progress are increased public spending on agricultural research and development, integrated programs to promote advanced yield-enhancement technologies, mechanization in grain production, capacity building of farm producers, adoption of modern biotechnology, and expedited breeding of new, improved crop varieties. Investments will also be needed for transforming low- and medium-yield farmland into land of higher productivity and for the expansion or rehabilitation of irrigation infrastructure, and for the development of water users’ associations that can help improve water use efficiency in irrigation areas. Investments in improving on-farm water use efficiency through better technology are needed and should be combined with better water pricing policies.

Improving agricultural sustainability Current practices of overfertilization need to be changed to reduce environmental costs and ensure that agricultural resources and the environment are managed in more sustainable ways. Audits on heavy metal contami-

nation in major grain-producing regions can provide the necessary baseline information, while environmental risk assessments can help identify key target regions for action. The classification of key regions according to function can be used to determine potential treatments based on the severity of contamination and crop mixes can be adjusted accordingly. China should set sound, sciencebased criteria for tillage on land contaminated by heavy metals. For areas where contamination is severe and tillage should not continue in the future, ecological compensation schemes can be considered to support farmers’ jobs and incomes. The progress that has been made on reverting farmland back to forests should be carefully managed in order to prevent the reclamation of already retired farmland. The scope of the slopeland conversion program should be further expanded to also include severely desertified areas. A special subsidy program for land quality protection should be implemented to support farmers who opt to leave their land fallow, readjust their land mix, or limit the use of pesticides and chemical fertilizers.

Enhancing international cooperation and trade Following China’s WTO accession, progressive and predictable import growth has been shown to create win-win results. For example, China’s growth of soybean imports has driven global soybean production, particularly in the Americas, and promoted global trade. The benefits for China include meeting growing domestic demand and saving land and water resources. Building on these experiences, China should strengthen cooperation with major grain-producing nations by signing medium- and long-term grain trade agreements with such countries, and creating stable and diversified import avenues. China should also leverage its comparative advantages and expand agricultural development aid and investments in neighboring countries and in South America and Africa, and actively participate in global and regional food security governance. China should focus on agricultural technology transfer, and investments in processing, storage, transportation, and


CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

trade, ensuring socially responsible and sustainable investments. While such investments may not result immediately in agricultural products flowing to China, they will increase other countries’ grain production capacity and improve global supply, which in turn will improve the external environment of food security for China.

Reforming grain price formation mechanisms China’s grain price mechanism has resulted in market distortions and a heavy fiscal burden for the government, and requires reform. China should allow grain prices to fluctuate freely during normal periods and secure food supply for low-income groups through food subsidy programs. Only in times of natural disaster or external shocks should the government intervene and release the state’s emergency grain reserves. China’s grain producer price should be replaced by a target price system. Moving away from direct government buying in the market to price subsidies linked to a target price (price benchmark) should be considered. This would separate price formation from government subsidies, the benefits of which would include gains to farmers and less market distortion. Such a policy has been adopted by many countries in their transition from price support to direct subsidies. While conducting price reform, China needs to quicken the pace of building a food safety net for vulnerable income groups. Food price inflation and benchmarks for social relief and benefits need to be better linked. For specifically vulnerable groups, such as households in extreme poverty, a direct food supply system should be established.

Improving the efficiency of grain producer subsidies China’s existing grain subsidy policy should be maintained to help stabilize farmer’s income expectations. Subsidy levels should be adjusted regularly to counter the erosion of farmers’ gains because of rising production costs. Current agricultural subsidies are still comfortably below the WTO-mandated caps, and there is room to grow further. But

China’s subsidy policy also needs reform to meet the new food security objectives. Subsidies should be better linked to yields of grain crops and incremental subsidies should favor the main grain-producing regions and producers. China may also create a special subsidy program linked to environmental protection to create incentives for farmers to opt for retiring farmland or reducing input levels.

Reforming China’s grain reserves and circulation system The government should carefully distinguish between strategic grain reserves and grain buffer stocks. Strategic reserves are built primarily to withstand systemic grain supply shocks, and such reserves should be modest. Buffer stocks would be used mainly to balance grain supply and demand between seasons and different regions and should be concentrated in major grain consumption regions, especially city clusters. The share of processed grains should be increased, and the role of local governments in building grain reserves should be strengthened. China may also create incentives for grain processing and circulation enterprises to contribute to grain reserves. And finally, China needs to improve its network of modern grain logistics, which runs through major interprovincial corridors and connects major grain-producing regions, distribution centers, and transportation hubs to cities and city clusters. The focus should be on consolidating existing grain logistics resources, creating a network of critical grain logistics hubs, and strengthening the connections between such hubs and railway, waterway, and highway transportation infrastructure. Warehousing services should be made more specialized and market based, and grain warehousing could be professionalized and privatized.

Notes 1. To assess food consumption, production, and self-sufficiency issues for China, different food types are converted into CEs, taking into account the higher costs of producing livestock products relative to producing an equivalent weight of cereal products (K. Rask and

367


368

URBAN CHINA

2.

3.

4.

5.

N. Rask 2011). The coefficients used in this report reflect the high costs of producing livestock products relative to cereals and the sharp differences between different animal products. The coefficients used are as follows: beef, 19.8; mutton and goat meat,19.8; offal, 12.8; other meat, 12.0; pork, 8.5; poultry, 4.7; fish and seafood, 3.3; other aquatic products, 0.1; eggs, 3.8; milk, 1.2; butter, 2.1; cream, 10; other animal fat, 12.0. Modeling and simulation exercises, using the CWSM, were applied to quantify the relationship between urbanization and water consumption in the agricultural sector in China. Simulations were conducted for overall water balance, intersectoral water allocation, and their impacts on agricultural production for China’s 10 major river basins, including the Liao, Songhua, Hai, Huai, Yellow, Yangtze, Pearl, Southeast, Southwest and Northwest rivers (see map 5.1). For a detailed treatment of the CSWM model used for this study, see J. Wang and others (2013). Hukou is China’s household registration system. It separates rural and urban citizens and imposes restrictions on rural residents’ mobility to settle in urban areas and gain access to urban social security and public services. The National Statistics Bureau of China calculates rural food consumption per capita as total household consumption divided by permanent household members. These members include the following: people living at home all year, people living at home at least for 6 months, and people living at home for less than 6 months per year but remitting income to the household. Data are from Chinese Center for Agricultural Policy surveys on food consumption at home and away from home for 1,340 families in Beijing, Chengdu, Nanjing, Shanghai, Shenyang, Xiamen, and Xi’an during 2007–11.

References Bai, Junfei, Huanguang Qiu, and Jikun Huang. 2013. “Changes of China’s Food Consumption.” Project report submitted to World Bank and Development Research Center of the State Council, Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. Bai, Junfei, Thomas I. Wahl, Bryan T. Lohmar, and Jikun Huang. 2010. “Food away from Home in Beijing: Effects of Wealth, Time, and ‘Free’ Meals.” China Economic Review 21 (3): 432–41.

Cai, Fang, and Meiyan Wang. 2010. “Growth and Structural Changes in Employment in Transition China.” Journal of Comparative Economics 38 (1): 71–81. Chan, Kam Wing. 2010. “The Global Financial Crisis and Migrant Workers in China: ‘There Is No Future as a Labourer; Returning to the Village Has No Meaning.’” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 34 (3): 659–77. Chen, Feng-gui, Hong-ou Zhang, Qi-tao Wu, and others. 2010. “A Study on Coordinate Development between Population Urbanization and Land Urbanization in China. Human Geography 25 (5): 53–58. Chen, Xi-wen. 2011. “Some Issues in the Rural Development of China.” Journal of Nanjing Agricultural University (Social Sciences Edition) 11 (1): 1–6. Chen, Zhigang, Fu-tian Qu, Li Han, and others. 2010. “The Rural Land Issues in the Process of the Industrialization and the Urbanization: Features, Incentives, and Resolution Path.” Reform of Economic System, 5: 93–98. de Brauw, Alan, Jikun Huang, Scott Rozelle, Linxiu Zhang, and Yigang Zhang. 2002. “The Evolution of China’s Rural Labor Markets during the Reforms.” Journal of Comparative Economics 30 (2): 329–53. de Brauw, Alan, and Scott Rozelle. 2008. “Reconciling the Returns to Education in Off-Farm Wage Employment in Rural China.” Review of Development Economics 12 (1): 57–71. de Brauw, Alan, Jikun Huang, Linxiu Zhang, and Scott Rozelle. 2013. “The Feminisation of Agriculture with Chinese Characteristics.” Journal of Development Studies 49 (5): 689–704. Deng, Xiangzheng, Jikun Huang, and Scott Rozelle. 2013. “Impact of Urbanization on Land Productivity and Cultivated Land Area in China.” Project report submitted to the World Bank and Development Research Center of the State Council, Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. Du, Ying, Gaihe Yang, Liping Xu, and others. 2005. “Analysis of Ecological Effects in Urbanization Process.” Journal of Northwest A&F University (Social Science Edition) 5 (2): 97–101. Easter, K. William, and Yang Liu. 2005. “Cost Recovery and Water Pricing for Irrigation and Drainage: What Works?” Washington, DC: World Bank. Fischer, Günther, Tatiana Ermolieva, and Laixiang Sun. 2010. “Environmental Pressure from


CHINA’S URBANIZATION AND FOOD SECURIT Y

Intensification of Livestock and Crop Production in China: Plausible Trends towards 2030.” CATSEI Project Report D22, Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. Fukase, Emiko, and Will Martin. 2013. “Who Will Feed China in the 21st Century? Income Growth and the Demand and Supply for Food in China.” Draft report, Montesquieu University–Bordeaux IV, Bordeaux, France. Han, Jun. 2010. Strategic Research on China’s Food Production Capacity and Balancing Supply and Demand. Beijing: Capital University of Economics & Business Press. Hu, Mu, and Hejin Ni. 2010. “Research on Relationship between Urbanization and the New Rural Construction Based on Dynamic Perspective.” Chinese Agricultural Science Bulletin 26 (7): 364–69. Huang, Jikun. 1999. “Social Development, Urbanization and Food Consumption.” Social Sciences in China 4: 102–16. Huang, Jikun and Howarth Bouis. “Structural Changes in the Demand for Food in Asia: Empirical Evidence from Taiwan.” Agricultural Economics 26 (2001): 57–69. Huang, Jikun, and Cristina David. 1993. “Demand for Cereal Grains in Asia: The Effect of Urbanization.” Agricultural Economics 8: 107–24. Huang, Jikun, and Scott Rozelle. 1998. “Market Development and Food Consumption in Rural China.” China Economic Review 9 (1): 25–45. Huang, Jikun, Jun Yang, Zhurong Huang, Huaiju Liu, Junfei Bai. 2013. “Analysis on Impacts of Urbanization on Food Consumption and Grain Demand.” Report, Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. — — —. 2014. “Urbanization and Food Consumption.” A project report submitted to the World Bank and Development Research Center of the State Council, Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. Huang, Jikun, Jun Yang, and Scott Rozelle. 2010. “China’s Agriculture: Drivers of Change and Implications for China and the Rest of World.” Agricultural Economics 41: 47–55. ———. 2014. “Urbanization and Food Security in China.” A project report submitted to World Bank and Development Research Center of the State Council. Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. Huang, Jikun, Lifen Zhu, Xiangzheng Deng, and Scott Rozelle. 2005. “Cultivated Land Changes in China: The Impacts of Urbanization and Industrialization.” Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineer 5884: 135–49.

Huang, Ming-hua, Mo Chen, and Jing-wen Zhang. 2011. “The Linkage Plan of UrbanRural Construction Land-Use Necessity and Must of Urbanization and Farmland Protection.” Urban Planning and Design 1: 61–65. Li, Hongbin, Lei Li, Binzhen Wu, and Yanyan Xiong. 2012. “The End of Cheap Chinese Labor.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 26 (4): 57–74. Li, Suqin, and Hengyi Li. 2012. “Resource Endowment Advantage Reversion and Countermeasures in the Construction of Henan Grain Core Area.” Chinese Journal of Agricultural Resources and Regional Planning 33 (3): 3–44. Lohmar, Brian, and James Hansen. 2007. “Interactions Between Resource Scarcity and Trade Policy: The Potential Effects of Water Scarcity on China’s Agricultural Economy under the Current TRQ Regime.” Paper presented at the International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium Summer Symposium, Beijing, China, July 8–9. Ma, Yong-huan, and Wen-yuan Niu. 2009. “Forecasting on Grain Demand and Availability of Cultivated Land: Use Resources Based on Grain Safety in China. China Soft Science 3: 11–16. Ministry of Water Resources. 2006–10. Water Resources Bulletin. Beijing: China Water Power Press. Mu, Guangzong, Changbao Mao, Jinjing Wu, and others. 2013. “Study on the Population Vulnerability and Optimization in Rural China.” Journal of China Agricultural University (Social Sciences Edition) 30 (3). Nie Fengying, Jieying Bi, and Xuebiao Zhang. “Study on China’s Food Security Status.” Proceedings of the International Conference on Agricultural Risk and Food Security 2010 1: 301–10. NSBC (National Statistical Bureau of China). 2012. China Statistical Yearbook. Beijing: Statistical Press. ———. 2011. China Statistical Yearbook. Beijing: Statistical Press. ———. 2000. National Rural Household Survey. Beijing: China Statistical Press. ———. 1990. China Statistical Yearbook. Beijing: China Statistical Press. Otsuka, Keijiro. 2013. “Food Insecurity, Income Inequality, and the Changing Comparative Advantage in World Agriculture.” Agricultural Economics 44 (s1): 7–18. Rask, Kolleen, and Norman Rask. 2011. “Economic Development and Food Production-

369


370

URBAN CHINA

Consumption Balance: A Growing Global Challenge.” Food Policy 36 (2): 186–96. Shu, Jian-ling, and Quan Chen. 2012. “Dynamic Relationship between China’s Urbanization and the Food Security. Journal of Xi’an University of Finance and Economics 25 (3): 11–15. Taylor, J. Edward, Scott Rozelle, and Alan de Brauw. 2003. “Migration and Incomes in Source Communities: A New Economics of Migration Perspective from China.” Economic Development and Cultural Change 52 (1): 75–101. Wang, Jinxia, Jikun Huang, and Scott Rozelle. 2013. “Urbanization, Agricultural Water Use and Crop Production in China.” Project report submitted to the World Bank and Development Research Center of the State Council, Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. Wang, Jinxia, Jikun Huang, and J. Yang. 2009. “Climate Change, Water and Agricultural Development in the 3H Region and Overall China.” Project report submitted to the World Bank, Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. Wang Jinxia, Zhigang Xu, Jikun Huang, and Scott Rozelle. 2005. “Incentives in Water Management Reform: Assessing Effect on Water Use, Production and Poverty in the

Yellow River Basin.” Environment and Development Economics 10: 769–99. Wang, Xiahui, Huiyuan Zhang, Wang, Bo, and others. 2008. “Research on Environmental Safety in Rapid Urbanization Process. Urban Problems 5 (3): 11–15. Wang, Xiaobing, Jikun Huang, and Scott Rozelle. 2013. “Wage Growth and Mechanical Operation: Evidence from Rural China.” Project report submitted to the World Bank and Development Research Center of the State Council, Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy, Beijing. Wen, Qi, and Ding Jin-mei. 2011. “Optimal Path and Strategy of Regional Industrial Structure under Water Resources Intimidation: A Case Study of Yulin.” Research of Agricultural Modernization 32 (1): 91–96. Wu, Laping. 2013. “A Study of Impacts of Urbanization on China’s Demand for Grains.” Report, China Agricultural University, Beijing. Zhang, Linxiu, Renfu Luo, Chengfang Liu, and Scott Rozelle. 2006. “Investing in Rural China-Tracking China’s Commitment to Modernization.” Chinese Economy 39 (4): 57–84. Zhao, Jingzhu, Qishan Luo, Hongbin Deng, and Yan Yan. 2008. “Opportunities and Challenges of Sustainable Agricultural Development in China.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 363: 893–904.


6 Financing Urbanization

Introduction China’s current approach to financing urbanization has been reasonably successful in mobilizing the resources that cities have needed to grow their economies, build the infrastructure required by the economy, and deliver services to the expanding urban population. China has experienced a high growth of urbanization for three decades, and the way China has proceeded with urbanization has been pro-growth, with resources being effectively mobilized and geared toward industries and productive infrastructure. In turn, the high economic growth has contributed to improvements in household welfare through higher income and better public services and infrastructure. This approach has served China’s interest fairly well. As China enters a new stage of development, the downsides of this old pro-growth urbanization model have become more apparent. The existing urbanization model has relied heavily on land conversion and land financing, and on production-based derivative taxation, which has caused urban sprawl and, on occasion, ghost towns and wasteful development of industrial parks and real estate. In addition, China now faces dual dualism—a “new dualism” between local

hukou and migrant populations and the “old dualism” of urban and rural disparities. This dual dualism, along with its accompanying unequal access to public services between people with and without urban hukou, has acted as a barrier to labor mobility, which has kept China’s urbanization rate too low. At the same time, the large influx of migrants puts pressures on urban services, and urban citizens perceive an erosion of service quality. Further, despite progress in environmental standards and policies, the cost of pollution to the nation’s health is rising as China’s population is increasingly concentrated in cities. At the same time, land-intensive urbanization has reduced availability of farm land, increasing competition for scarce water resources and adding to pollution that undermines agricultural productivity. China’s shift to a new urbanization path—one that is efficient, inclusive, and sustainable—to support its transformation into an innovative, modern, and harmonious economy in the next decades will require adjustments in the fi nancing system. Given the expected economic and social trends, as well as the policy goals pursued by the political leadership, maintaining past financing policies without change is neither feasible nor desirable. First, the cities—now hosting 371


372

URBAN CHINA

more than 700 million people—can expect up to 300 million more migrants over the next two decades. Second, the disparities between original and new urban residents, and the backlogs in the quantity and quality of public services in rural regions, must be addressed. Third, economic growth will slow as the economy matures. These changes will have significant impacts on the demand for public services, on the cost and ways of delivering them, and on revenue mobilization. Many are concerned about the budget implications of such changes and wonder which public fi nance reforms are needed to ensure that China can afford urbanization in the next decades. This report first reviews the main features of the new urbanization, measures the costs of urbanization, and evaluates its affordability. It then explores how well suited the existing urbanization finance system is to the challenges posed by the new urbanization. The diagnosis is focused on three sectors—public social services, infrastructure investment, and affordable housing. It concludes that the existing finance system that has worked well in leading an investment-driven economic growth strategy will work less well in a new, more urban China. In fact, some fundamental weaknesses in the existing system have already emerged, causing significant efficiency, equity, and environmental costs and threatening financial sustainability. The challenges for fi nancing urbanization are, therefore, more about addressing these underlying weaknesses than filling the financing gap for public services and infrastructure spending. As the main part of the report discusses, the centerpiece of the reforms in urban finances will be a move toward a system that more clearly separates the traditional function of government—the provision of equitable and efficient levels of basic public services— from commercial investment and production functions. The emphasis of subnational governments will be on the delivery of local public services, and the rewards for local leaders should depend on how well they perform this responsibility. The fiscal system will need to encourage people and enterprises to move to the places where they are most productive, not to where they get the best tax or land deal from a local government. Revenues from land

conversion are likely to taper off, so new local revenue sources are needed to replace lost revenue, whereas properly regulated access to borrowing will be needed to finance infrastructure investment. The financial sector will need to intermediate capital efficiently to meet local governments’ needs for infrastructure finance, while at the same time imposing financial discipline on local governments and avoiding financial sector disruption. The private sector will need to play a larger role in financing and delivering infrastructure investment and other public services. To move in this direction, government will need to make important decisions about numerous key features of the fi nancing system, including the following: Aligning public finance with functions. Functions need to be appropriately assigned to either the central government or local governments; functions with strong externalities such as funding social security could be centralized; the tax base could be shifted from production based to consumption based; revenue responsibilities between the central and local governments could be reassigned to follow the functions; local governments need to be given revenue-raising powers; and the budget system needs to be reformed in a way that will give subnational governments the ability to effectively plan and control the allocation of fiscal resources. Also, a stronger interprovincial and intraprovincial equalization program needs to be put in place to ensure sufficient funding for basic public service packages, and the transparency and accountability of local governments should be strengthened. This would be no small reform. Abandoning the monopoly on land leases. The increments in land value that emanate from better infrastructure services must be captured in a less distorted way (through property taxes, for example), and these funds must be used to subsidize investment in infrastructure. Government should also develop regulatory rules to mitigate the fiscal risks emanating from land market volatility while obtaining the best economic value of land assets that local governments have already acquired.


FINANCING URBANIZATION

Developing stable and sustainable debt finance. Local government financing vehicles (LGFVs) should be either absorbed by government or converted to special purpose vehicles (SPVs); local governments should be allowed to borrow on budget; a rigorous regulatory framework needs to be developed to better manage the debt risks; the sources of long-term financing for local governments and SPVs need to be diversified; and the incentives for local governments, SPVs, and their lenders should be aligned so that all of them pursue creditworthy financing. Promoting the involvement of the private sector in broader urban development. China may consider shifting the focus of PPP contracts from capital fi nancing toward service provision by bundling investments for asset creation with operation and maintenance requirements over a long period of time. This requires improving policies and incentives for the private provision of public services. And careful risk assessment and proper risk sharing are needed to manage contingent liabilities related to PPP contracts. To strengthen institutional capacity, special PPP units may be established at the local level. Clarifying the role of housing provident funds (HPFs) in the affordable housing program. Alternative means of financing the program need to be explored, including direct subsidies from government revenues, contributions from employers, and partnerships with the private sector.

Urbanization in transition and its implication for financing Can China afford the new urbanization path? Provided a major structural reform of its financial model is implemented, the answer is an emphatic yes. Managing the government sector, especially the urban local governments, will present a serious public policy challenge. The government will need to decide whether public financing policy in the next two decades is dictated by fi nding quick fi xes for the problems, or whether a major structural reform should be undertaken to get ahead of the problems.

Financing challenges from the new urbanization path Urbanization will challenge government expenditures and the capacity to deliver social services. The next two decades will see 300 million more people living in urban areas. The urban population will increase to about two-thirds of the total population by 2030, from slightly more than half currently.1 Along with the expected rebalancing of the growth pattern and increasing income levels, new demands from urban households and business will have to be met. Families living in metropolitan areas, especially the hopedfor emerging middle class, will be looking to upgrade their housing and access better urban amenities and social services. New service industries will be asking for locations closer to population centers and for a different package of infrastructure and social services from that sought by manufacturing industries (Yusuf 2013). Compliance with the environmental protection standards set by the central government also will be an issue (see supporting report 7: Green Urbanization). Against this backdrop, significant additions to the existing urban infrastructure and improvements in service delivery will be required to ensure that cities can accommodate new residents and meet new demands. Local governments in particular will feel the budget pressures associated with capital and operation and maintenance expenditures. For urbanization to be inclusive and to avoid social fragmentation, cities must provide equal access to public services to both original and new urban residents. For most public services such as compulsory education and health, a national residence-based system is now in effect. 2 In practice, however, some cities offer better entitlements to public services and easier access to resident worker permits than do others. Disparities in access to affordable housing are already a concern, with only 10 percent of migrants owning their urban residence compared with 84 percent of hukou residents. Equalization policies, therefore, will have to address the existing duality between urban residents with hukou and those without. In addition, equalization policies will have to manage the additional economic and social pressures that further

373


374

URBAN CHINA

migration to cities potentially could bring. Only 20 percent of migrants now move to cities with their entire family, but this pattern will change in the future as adequate education, health services, and affordable housing become available to them (Wang, Shen, and Li 2008). Because of the large gaps in the quantity and quality of public services across provinces and between rural and urban areas, any policy change facilitating the access of migrant workers to urban services should go hand in hand with improvements in rural services, lest rural residents be encouraged to migrate to cities solely to access better social services. 3 Finally, local resentment toward the migrant worker community may arise from the fear that larger demands will cause overall service levels to deteriorate or that migrants will receive preferential treatment without paying their fair share of the costs. China will have to manage integration challenges of this kind, which the United States and Europe also have experienced. Expenditure management needs to be adapted to the new urbanization path. Annual economic growth in China is projected to remain at around 7 percent for the next few years, gradually declining to about 6 percent by 2020 and to 5.5 percent by 2030. Even though that is healthy economic growth by world standards, it will not generate the fast-growing fiscal revenues of the past two decades. If government officials in charge of expenditure programs were to make budget plans based on a growth rate extrapolated from the past trend, they would risk planned expenditures growing much faster than actual revenues, which ultimately would raise public fi nancing concerns. In addition, government officials should plan for new spending pressures, notably an aging population demanding higher pension and health outlays and a society more concerned with environmental sustainability, which requires actions to cope with congestion and pollution. As revenue growth slows and new spending pressures arise, the expansion of some government spending programs will have to be contained and more emphasis given to cost rationalization and control. Structural reform is necessary to manage the expenditure pressures from the new

urbanization path, particularly as the hukou system is removed and urban-rural disparities are narrowed. The immediate fi nancing problem is to absorb and service the new residents and workers in cities without harming the quality of life of the existing urban population.4 New financing policies that address resource constraints and insufficient service delivery capacity, especially among local governments, must be formulated to ensure that expenditures and revenues grow hand in hand, thus avoiding a buildup of unsustainable fiscal pressures. Incentives for government officials to implement these policies effectively will have to be in place as well. In this regard, urbanization in China is less efficient, inclusive, and sustainable than the central government would like it to be. Local governments have not fully complied with many goodwill policies that have been issued by the central government, suggesting that incentive is a major issue to consider in designing a reform. Structural reform is also indispensable to mobilizing additional resources to finance increasing urbanization costs, especially at the local government level. Urbanization potentially can generate sufficient fiscal resources to cope with the increasing expenditures. Migrant workers can reduce the labor shortage that constrains the expansion of private sector output and thus help attract more capital and exploit economies of scale and agglomeration effects. That should lead to an increase in value added and incomes, therefore also raising revenue from major tax sources. Migrant workers also can add to the government revenues with their taxable consumption and their contributions to social security schemes.5 Yet the potential revenues from urbanization will materialize only to the extent that the right incentives to local officials are in place. Incentives to promote manufacturing and generate land revenues in sprawling cities must be replaced by incentives to promote services and mobilize new revenue sources in dense cities (see supporting report 1 on Urbanization and Economic Growth). In addition, incentives facing the local cadre system should include a longertime horizon and place more weight on providing the particular bundle of services that


FINANCING URBANIZATION

the local economy needs to support an efficient, inclusive, and sustainable urbanization (Zhou 2007; Li and Zhou 2005). Structural reform will have to deal with heterogeneity of urbanization across China. The budgetary impacts of urbanization will be anything but uniform across cities. Needs, resources, goals, and social values differ widely throughout China. Residents and businesses in some cities will demand higher levels of service, the cost of service provision will be greater in others, and the backlog of infrastructure needs will be larger in yet others. Even if the additional fiscal revenues from urbanization turns out to be large enough at the aggregate level to cover the incremental cost of providing basic services in all urban areas, they will not be large enough for every individual urban area. To accommodate these differences in preferences and expenditure needs, local governments should be given more control over the amount of revenues that they can raise to meet their responsibilities. In addition, the net cost to the government budget would be significantly reduced if fiscal resources were distributed based on serviced population; for example, transfers and subsidies for education, pensions, and health insurance benefiting the rural population can be reallocated to cities if and when workers migrate to there.6

Can China afford the new urbanization path? How much will urbanization cost the Chinese economy? A quantitative model developed by World Bank staff estimates the total costs of all urban public services, infrastructure, and social housing. Significant investments would be necessary to meet demands arising from the current pattern of urbanization and the government policies in place. Consistent with the macroeconomic and demographic projections obtained from China’s Development Research Center (DRC) model for the period 2013–30, the model projects capital, operation, and maintenance expenditures required to erect urban infrastructure (including roads, subways, draining, sewage, landscaping, garbage treatment,

water, and heating) and to supply social housing, education, and health to urbanites, covering both the capital expenditure (CAPEX) and the current expenditures such as the operation and maintenance expenditure (OM), as well as the labor cost of urban education). Simulations focus on the gross cost of delivering infrastructure and social services to migrants at urban standards, without deducting savings (if any) that may be attained by eased spending pressures in the rural areas from which the migrants originate. Annex 6A provides a technical annotation to the modeling methodology. In the costing model, the volume of physical investment in the selected sectors that is required to support urbanization responds to fundamentals (such as the size and density of the population living in cities, the number of students, the number of households benefiting from social housing) as well as to public policies determining coverage of social services and eligibility criteria to access them. The unit cost of investing in physical capital is calibrated using historical data and projections that follow trends in urban incomes and prices. Public policies regulating quality and generousness of social services also affect unit costs. Simulations from the model suggest that overall costs of urbanization will gradually decline as a share of gross domestic product (GDP). The total annual costs of all urban public services, infrastructure and social housing would average 6.1 percent of GDP in 2013–30, with a peak of 7.3 percent in the early period (2013–17) due to migrant integration and the government’s ambitious social housing program (table 6.1; figure 6.1). As a consequence of the policy stimulus pursued in 2009–12 to cope with the global crisis, the projected investment bulge in the next few years reflects the ongoing construction plans to extend social housing programs. Long-term cost estimates phase out these temporary phenomena and acknowledge that the urbanization process will persist, but at a slower pace than in the past. For 2013–30, the annual capital, operation, and maintenance expenditures related to urban infrastructure would reach 2.5 percent of GDP, on average; those costs associated with education and health

375


376

URBAN CHINA

TABLE 6.1 Urbanization costs and fiscal space: Baseline scenario Share of GDP 2008–12

2013–17

2018–30

2013–30

8.6 3.5 1.9 0.5 0.1 0.2 0.4 0.1 0.2 0.1 5.1 2.0 3.1 0.0

7.3 2.7 1.4 0.6 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.1 4.6 1.4 3.2 0.0

5.6 2.5 1.2 0.6 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 3.1 0.5 2.6 0.0

6.1 2.5 1.3 0.6 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 3.6 0.7 2.8 0.0

33.3 25.0 8.3 31.9 23.6 6.0 2.3

31.8 26.5 5.3 31.1 23.6 4.7 2.9

30.4 25.9 4.5 29.6 23.3 3.4 2.9

30.8 26.0 4.7 30.0 23.4 3.8 2.9

33.3 25.0 8.3 31.9 23.6 6.0 2.3

29.5 25.8 3.7 30.9 23.6 4.7 2.7

27.3 25.2 2.1 28.7 23.3 3.4 2.0

27.9 25.4 2.5 29.3 23.4 3.8 2.2

Urbanization costs (CAPEX and OM) Infrastructure investment Roads Subways Draining Sewage Landscaping Garbage treatment Water Heating Social services Social housing Education (includes labor costs) Health Central and local governments Unchanged land and debt financing policies Fiscal space Fiscal revenues Net borrowings Total expenditure Recurrent primary expenditures Capital expenditures Interests Central and local governments Abandoning land and debt financing policies Fiscal space Fiscal revenues Net borrowings Total expenditure Recurrent primary expenditures Capital expenditures Interests

Source: Staff estimation. Note: Figures are annual averages for selected periods. CAPEX = capital expenditure; OM = operation maintenance expenditure.

would be 2.8 percent of GDP; and social housing would amount to 0.7 percent of GDP. How much of the estimated capital, operation, and maintenance expenditures would central and local governments bear? Public and private sectors will share these increased costs of urbanization. The model assumes that the proportion taken by the public sector remains at the historic level, around three-fourths. For instance, the public sector fi nances 62 percent of all urban infrastructure; 100 percent of social housing, health (hospitals), and compulsory education (primary and junior-middle schools); and 29 percent of noncompulsory education (vocational and senior high schools). Operation and maintenance expenditures are fully funded

by the government in all urban infrastructure sectors, social housing, and health. The government also funds all of these costs for compulsory education, but only about 75 percent of the recurrent costs of noncompulsory education, with tuitions and donations covering the remaining amount. 7 Will the fiscal space be sufficient to finance the investments required by urbanization in its current form, under the existing public policies? The resource envelope available to fund expenditures, also referred to as the fiscal space, comprises two fi nancing sources: government revenues resulting from fiscal policies, and government borrowings (both on- and off-budget), whose level is consistent with preserving debt sustain-


FINANCING URBANIZATION

377

FIGURE 6.1 Cost of urbanization as a share of GDP

10 9 8

Percent of GDP

7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030

Urban public housing OM

Urban public housing CAPEX

Urban health CAPEX

Urban education CAPEX, OM, and labor

Urban infrastructure OM

Urban infrastructure CAPEX

Data source: Staff estimation. Note: CAPEX = capital expenditure; OM = operation maintenance expenditure.

ability and fi nancial stability. Whether the prospective fiscal space would be enough to accommodate urbanization costs and other public expenditures responsibilities is a key question. The costing model assesses the affordability of urbanization costs (or lack thereof) by confronting estimates of fiscal space and total expenditure, for which it projects fi scal revenues, government net borrowings, and public expenditures other than urbanization costs. Fiscal revenues include taxes, nontax receipts, and land-leasing receipts (net of land acquisition and relocation compensation costs). They are driven by the DRC macroeconomic projections and assumptions on land fi nancing policies. Borrowings include all direct government debts and the indirect debts of local governments contracted through their fi nancial vehicles. Net borrowings are projected assuming a target level of public debt relative to GDP, with the target summarizing outcomes pursued by debt-financing policies. Expenditures other than urbanization costs are projected consistently with the DRC model and the prospective nominal GDP rate. These expenditures are added to the estimated urbanization costs to obtain the projection of total expenditure.

If the current policies concerning land and debt fi nancing were continued into the future, the fiscal space would just cover the total inclusive expenditures of urbanization costs. With unchanged policies, the annual net land-leasing receipts would be 0.8 percent of GDP in 2013–30, whereas the annual net borrowings would amount to 4.7 percent of GDP, maintaining the public debt-toGDP ratio at 53 percent (which was the level reached in 2012, after large borrowings by local governments to fund fiscal stimulus and cope with the global crisis). Model simulations suggest that fiscal space could afford the costs of urbanization borne by the government: in 2013–30, on average, the estimated annual fi scal space is 30.8 percent of GDP and the total expenditure is 30 percent of GDP (figures 6.2a, 6.3a). Even the expected investment bulge in the next few years would be affordable within the projected fiscal revenues and net borrowings. But the fiscal space leaves very little margin to cope with unforeseen, unfavorable events, and thus public fi nances would be in a fragile position and lack flexibility. More important, a continuation of the current policies governing land and debt financing would mean that inefficiencies would persist in the urbanization process, including excessive urban sprawl,


378

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 6.2 Government expenditures as a share of GDP a. Unchanged land and debt-financing policies 35 30

Percent

25 20 15 10 5

20 0 20 8 0 20 9 1 20 0 1 20 1 1 20 2 1 20 3 1 20 4 1 20 5 16 20 1 20 7 1 20 8 1 20 9 2 20 0 2 20 1 22 20 2 20 3 2 20 4 2 20 5 26 20 2 20 7 2 20 8 2 20 9 30

0

b. Abandoning land and debt-financing policies 35 30

Percent

25 20 15 10 5

20 0 20 8 0 20 9 1 20 0 1 20 1 1 20 2 1 20 3 1 20 4 1 20 5 16 20 1 20 7 1 20 8 1 20 9 2 20 0 2 20 1 22 20 2 20 3 2 20 4 2 20 5 26 20 2 20 7 2 20 8 2 20 9 30

0

Recurrent expenditures, others CAPEX, others Recurrent expenditures, urbanization cost CAPEX, urbanization cost Interests

Source: Staff estimation. Note: CAPEX = capital expenditure.

social problems related to land conversion and compensation to displaced farmers, and risks associated with off-budget borrowing. Abandoning the current policies concerning land and debt fi nancing altogether, rather than reforming them properly, would significantly reduce the fiscal space and risk derailment of the new urbanization path. Alternative model simulations assume that farmers are given full compensation, which causes net land-leasing receipts to drop in 2015–30 (yet continuing with land leases and urban sprawl), and that the local governments’ net borrowings (most notably the

off-budget debts) are severely restricted to reduce the public debt-to-GDP ratio from 53 percent in 2012 to 30 percent in 2030. With these radical policy changes, the annual net land-leasing receipts are zero after 2015 and the annual net borrowings would amount to 2.5 percent of GDP on average. Costs of urbanization would no longer be affordable: in 2013–30, on average, the estimated annual fiscal space is 27.9 percent of GDP and the total expenditure is 29.3 percent of GDP (figures 6.2b, 6.3b). Proper structural reform, therefore, should guide the revision of financing policies. Would structural reform leading to a more efficient, inclusive, and sustainable urbanization path ensure that such an urbanization path is also affordable? The highquality urbanization scenario envisions an ambitious (yet feasible) structural reform package to achieve a higher urbanization rate, a faster real GDP growth, a rebalanced economy with more consumption expenditure and service output, and smaller urbanrural income disparities compared with the baseline scenario. In addition, policies concerning land and debt financing are properly reformed in two directions. First, land policy reform aims at transforming local government revenues from a land-transaction basis to a real estate-property basis, creating incentives to rationalize the use of land resources and to redirect the urbanization pattern from a horizontal expansion of cities toward a vertical expansion with higher population density. Second, debt policy reform seeks to establish a sound legal and operational framework for local governments to borrow on-budget and in a sustainable manner, as well as to significantly slow down the rapid pace of indebtedness incurred by local governments. Given fewer incentives to seek a horizontal urban expansion (that is, sprawling cities), the built-up urban area is assumed under the model to stabilize at the current level, and thus urban population density increases going forward. Higher density reduces the required capital, operation, and maintenance expenditures related to urban infrastructure by 0.7 percentage points of GDP vis-à-vis the baseline scenario (table 6.2; figure 6.4).


FINANCING URBANIZATION

FIGURE 6.3 Fiscal space, government expenditures, and public debt as shares of GDP

a. Unchanged land and debt-financing policies

60 50

Percent

40 30 20 10

20 0 20 8 0 20 9 1 20 0 1 20 1 1 20 2 1 20 3 1 20 4 1 20 5 1 20 6 1 20 7 1 20 8 1 20 9 2 20 0 2 20 1 2 20 2 2 20 3 2 20 4 2 20 5 2 20 6 2 20 7 2 20 8 2 20 9 30

0

b. Abandoning land and debt-financing policies 60 50 40

Percent

Most savings result from the need to invest less in building roads when urban population is more concentrated. Infrastructure expenditures financed by the government, in turn, decrease by 0.4 percentage point of GDP. The property tax could raise revenues by 1.6 percent of GDP annually in 2015–30, more than offsetting the loss of land-leasing receipts that would happen if and when land leases and urban sprawl are discontinued. Net borrowings are assumed to reduce the public debt-to-GDP ratio from 53 percent in 2012 to 40 percent in 2030, and thus the average annual amount borrowed would be 3.2 percent of GDP in 2013–30. Model simulations suggest that in the reform scenario the more efficient, inclusive, and sustainable urbanization path is affordable. In 2013–30, on average, the estimated annual fiscal space is 29.9 percent of GDP and the total expenditure is 29 percent of GDP (figure 6.5; figure 6.6). Compared with the baseline scenario with unchanged land and debt-fi nancing policies, the reform scenario delivers a slightly higher margin to cope with unforeseen, unfavorable events, and corrects distortions induced by the current policies.

379

30 20

The urban finance challenges of China today are less the result of unwise policy decisions than of China simply outgrowing its system. The structure and growth of the economy changed dramatically in the past three decades since the major 1994 reforms; the economy draws on market principles to fuel its growth, but the financing system has lagged and even held on to some of the features of the pre-reform system. The harm caused by many of these outgrown features has been made more apparent by China’s urbanization. This section analyzes China’s current approach to urban finance with a focus on three sectors: public social services, infrastructure investment, and public housing.

Social services and public finance Economic growth and urbanization have increased demands for government services.

10 0 20 0 20 8 0 20 9 1 20 0 1 20 1 1 20 2 1 20 3 1 20 4 1 20 5 1 20 6 1 20 7 1 20 8 1 20 9 2 20 0 2 20 1 2 20 2 2 20 3 2 20 4 2 20 5 2 20 6 2 20 7 2 20 8 2 20 9 30

Financing urbanization in 2013: Key issues

Fiscal revenues Total expenditures

Net borrowings Public debt

Source: Staff estimation.

Over the past two decades, the public finance system has been very successful in mobilizing revenues to finance the increasing demand for public social services. The results have been good: public services have been significantly expanded. Nine years of education are now provided free. The number of licensed (assistant) doctors increased from 1.56 to 1.94 per 1,000 population, and the number of hospital beds increased from 2.3 to 3.9 per 1,000 populations. In addition, more people are covered by the social security net. By 2012, 484 million people participated in the urban


380

URBAN CHINA

TABLE 6.2 Urbanization costs and fiscal space: Reform scenario Percent of GDP 2008–12

2013–17

2018–30

2013–30

8.5 3.4 1.8 0.5 0.1 0.2 0.4 0.1 0.2 0.1 5.1 2.0 3.1 0.0

6.8 2.1 0.9 0.6 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 4.8 1.4 3.3 0.0

4.9 1.7 0.7 0.6 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 3.2 0.5 2.7 0.0

5.4 1.8 0.7 0.6 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 3.6 0.7 2.8 0.0

33.3 25.0 8.3 31.8 23.6 5.9 2.3

29.8 26.7 3.1 30.5 23.6 4.3 2.6

29.9 26.7 3.3 28.3 23.2 3.0 2.1

29.9 26.7 3.2 28.9 23.3 3.4 2.2

Urbanization costs (CAPEX and OM) Infrastructure investment Roads Subways Draining Sewage Landscaping Garbage treatment Water Heating Social services Social housing Education (includes labor costs) Health Central and local governments Reform scenario Fiscal space Fiscal revenues Net borrowings Total expenditure Recurrent primary expenditures Capital expenditures Interests

Source: Staff estimation. Note: Figures are annual averages for selected periods. CAPEX = capital expenditure; GDP = gross domestic product; OM = operation maintenance expenditure.

FIGURE 6.4

Cost of urbanization in the reform scenario, as a share of GDP

10 9 8

Percent

7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030

Urban public housing OM

Urban public housing CAPEX

Urban health CAPEX

Urban education CAPEX, OM, and labor

Urban infrastructure OM

Urban infrastructure CAPEX

Source: Staff estimation. Note: CAPEX = capital expenditure; GDP = gross domestic product; OM = operation maintenance expenditure.

or rural residents’ pension program, 304 million were in the employee pension program, and 265 million were in the employee health insurance program. (See supporting report

3: Inclusive Urbanization and Rural-Urban Integration for detailed discussion.) Most of China’s public services, such as education, health care, social security, envi-


381

FINANCING URBANIZATION

FIGURE 6.5 Government expenditures in reform scenario as a share of GDP

35 30

Percent

25 20 15 10 5 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030

Recurrent expenditures, others

CAPEX, others

Recurrent expenditures, urbanization cost

CAPEX, urbanization cost

Interest

Source: Staff estimation. Note: CAPEX = capital expenditure; GDP = gross domestic product.

FIGURE 6.6 Fiscal space, government expenditures, and public debt in reform scenario as shares of GDP

60 50

Percent

40 30 20 10 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030

Fiscal revenues

Net borrowings

Total expenditures

Public debt

Source: Staff estimation.

ronmental protection, transportation, and community affairs, are provided and financed by local governments.8 Education (94 percent local) and health (95 percent local) are the fastest-growing public expenditure categories. The result is that China’s local governments account for more than 80 percent of all general government expenditures. This high share

does not include local government spending on social security or infrastructure (figure 6.7). As a result, China is an extreme outlier in terms of the subnational share of government expenditures. The local government share of government spending is 41 percent in such decentralized countries as Canada and Germany and 48 percent in the United States.


382

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 6.7 Central and subnational expenditure, by function, 2012

Other Land affairs Culture Environment Energy Science Housing Defense Public security Health Transport Community affairs Agriculture Social protection General public services Education 0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

25,000

RMB (100 millions) Central expenditure

Subnational expenditure

Source: China Statistical Yearbook, 2013.

In stark contrast to the highly decentralized nature of spending, taxing power is highly centralized. Local governments have no ability to set the tax rate or to determine the size of the legal tax base. The central government designates some taxes as “local revenues”—taxes collected by the local governments and retained at the local level. In general, these local taxes have narrower tax bases and less stable revenue yields than the central and shared taxes. Local governments may impose user charges, but these too are usually subject to approval by higher-level governments, and full cost recovery is rare. Using the Chinese definition for “local taxation,” the subnational government share is about 30 percent. If the definition of local taxes is amended to include the ability to set the tax rate, then the subnational government share is negligible. Germany takes a similar approach in centralizing most tax rate and base decisions, as do Mexico and Indonesia among the large developing countries. On average, the share of local government taxes is about 23 percent in the industrial countries

and about 11 percent in the developing countries (Bahl and Sethi 2012).9 Intergovernmental transfers fi nance most subnational government expenditures in China and play an important role in shaping interregional equity. The 1994 Tax Sharing System reform established a new framework for the intergovernmental transfer system in China, replacing the ad hoc, negotiated transfers of the past with a rules-based mechanism (Bahl 1999; Qiao and Liu 2013). The current transfers between the central government and the provinces consist of two types—shared taxes, and general and conditional grants.10 The first, shared taxes (a 25 percent claim on value added taxes, or VATs, collections and a 40 percent claim on income tax collections), accounted for about 15.6 percent of all local government public finance revenues in 2012. The second type, general and conditional grants, accounted for 20.1 percent and 17.7 percent of local government public fi nance revenues, respectively. The trend in industrial countries is toward unconditional transfers, reflecting a desire to give more budget autonomy to subnational governments (Blochliger and Vammalle 2010). But in China, general grants account for 58.5 percent of total grants, and 49 percent of general grants are earmarked for certain program activities. The supported programs range widely, from grants to compensate for the loss of the agricultural tax to compulsory education grants. The interprovincial distribution of these grants, and in many cases how they are actually used, is affected by these earmarks. China’s general grants might be grouped into three categories. The equalization transfer, introduced in 1995, is designed to reduce fiscal disparities among provinces. The distribution is based on a formula that incorporates objective measurements of fiscal capacity and expenditure needs for the provinces. The actual amount distributed is calculated on the basis of the gap between standard current expenditures and standard current needs, adjusted for coefficients that take into account the size of the gap. The overall envelop of equalization transfer is decided on the basis of resource availability and policy considerations. Its share in general grants has been growing. The second category of


FINANCING URBANIZATION

general grants is the “tax rebate,” a return of some additional share of tax collections to richer provinces to lower resistance to tax reforms. Third, the resource shortfall at the subnational level arising from vertical imbalance is addressed with gap-filling transfers to local governments (Bahl and Qiao 2013). The conditional grants carry conditions about the purposes for which the funds will be used and in some cases about the standards of service to be provided; the grants also often require a copayment from local governments. Hundreds of specific-purpose grants are associated with a variety of programs at the central level. An example is the “compulsory education transfer,” introduced by the central government in support of the rural compulsory education program. Another example is the transfer introduced to subsidize the issuing of state bonds. Among the most important targets of specific transfers are transportation, affordable housing, and education. Many of the conditional transfers were introduced to address specific, immediate needs. Most of these transfers are monitored by a controlling central line ministry or its provincial counterpart. With a few exceptions, the transfers from provincial governments to subprovincial governments are at the discretion of the provincial governments. Provincial governments have considerable latitude in deciding expenditure assignments to subprovincial governments, how much of the intergovernmental transfers received from the central government they will retain for their own uses, and how they will allocate transfers among their cities and counties. This “federal” financing approach preserves provincial-level autonomy and allows the use of local information advantages. The result is a good deal of variation across provinces in how the allocations are made to the lower level city and county governments. In some cases, taxes are shared on a derivation basis—with the localities from which they are collected. Formula allocations, specific grants, and mandated passthrough of the funds also are used. Provinces have the authority to issue special grants on a project-by-project basis. With respect to the public finance budget, provincial governments have more autonomy in determining

the size of their revenue envelope than do either cities or counties. On average, county governments account for about half of all subnational government spending. Counties are financed more heavily by grants than by shared taxes. For example, in 2009, grants represented 53 percent of all revenues of county-level governments and below, but just 29 percent of prefecture revenue and 23 percent of provincial revenue. The land-leasing program has changed things, shifting more revenues to the lower-level governments, particularly to cities. China’s highly asymmetric public fi nance system, with its highly decentralized expenditure assignment and centralized revenues, implies that subnational governments have some control over what services they can deliver but relatively little control over the level of financing. Arguably, such an arrangement was the right approach during the past 30 years when the goal was to reward areas that were developing fast by giving them investment money to continue the growth. The strategy to “let some get rich fi rst,” as noted by Deng Xiaoping, was an important part of the early development of the industrial economy. This approach has advantages—it allows the central government to set the size of the total resource envelope and therefore to control the level of local government expenditures (importantly, spending from land-lease revenues is not directly controlled by the central government). Revenue centralization also has the advantages of allowing central control of the distribution of tax burdens and a capturing of economies of scale in tax administration. Finally, there is an inducement for increased tax effort. Local governments can directly encourage a higher effective tax rate by improving assessment and collection rates. The shared revenues provide an incentive for these revenue mobilization efforts. (Bahl 1999; Bahl and Wallich 1992). Equity and inclusiveness in access to public services remain major concerns, however. Newcomers to the cities have limited access to urban services because they do not have urban hukou, even though they now account for more than one-third of the urban labor force. This discrimination means

383


384

URBAN CHINA

that migrants often are forced to leave their families in rural areas where access to quality public services may be limited compared with those in urban areas. These challenges to equality in the delivery of public services are intertwined. Reforms such as the elimination of the hukou constraints on access to public services and better portability of pension and health benefits will equalize access to services, encourage labor mobility, and promote household consumption by reducing the need for precautionary savings (see supporting report 3: Inclusive Urbanization and Rural-Urban Integration). The size of general government has grown significantly since 1994 and is roughly in line with the size of government in uppermiddle-income countries. China’s expenditure structure differs from the industrial countries in two important aspects: the government spends a relatively larger share on economic activities including subsidies to firms, and a relatively smaller share on health and social protection services (World Bank and DRC 2013); and subnational governments deliver a very high share of services. These two observations suggest that the equity and inclusiveness problem stems less from a fi nancing constraint and more from the incentives and capacity of local governments and from distribution of resources across China. A comprehensive analysis of the public finance system reveals that expenditure assignments, revenue structure and assignments, and intergovernmental relations all play a role in shaping the incentives and capacity of local governments in delivering equitable and sustainable public services.

Expenditures The high decentralization of expenditure responsibilities may be explained by China’s size to some extent, but with the new urbanization pattern, decentralization is raising concern about allocative efficiency losses. Most of the concern centers on three areas: what government should do and what the private sector should do, which level of government should be responsible for financing social insurance programs, and whether urbanization has made the case for central-

ization of more responsibility. All three concerns have profound implications for the cost of urbanization and for its financing. With increasing urbanization, cities are better connected, and externalities are less able to be localized, making the fallout from expenditure assignment more apparent. If subnational governments are assigned responsibility for services where they cannot internalize externalities, or where they cannot capture economies of scale, the result will be an underprovision of the service or delivery at a higher unit cost. The classic example of spatial externalities is air pollution. Dust and particulates produced in one province can easily reach cities in a neighboring province, and emissions caused by agricultural activities can worsen urban pollution problems. The same result occurs in the case of competition for the use of water. A city government with responsibility for regulating water pollution may choose not to impose costly inspection measures, and this decision could have a negative impact on the national welfare. Or a city government might offer the children of migrant workers a lower-quality primary education, which could lead to undesirable equity effects now and lower labor productivity in the future. In some cases, these interurban effects call for direct regional or central government participation in service delivery, and in other cases it requires upper-level governments to play a strong coordination role, for example, in ensuring everyone benefits from universal public health and education services, and consumer safety. (Lou 2013; Bahl, Linn, and Wetzel 2013; Rojas 2008). Fiscal subsidies to industries have led to an inefficient pattern of industrial allocation and inefficient land use. Subnational governments frequently use tax exemptions, rebates, and subsidized land to attract industries to their provinces or cities. In the early phase of economic development when domestic savings were insufficient to finance industrial investment, competition among cities to attract foreign direct investment encouraged subnational governments to improve the business environment and infrastructure services. That is one of China’s success stories. As China developed to be upper-middle-income country with abundant domestic savings and


FINANCING URBANIZATION

a vibrant private sector, the downside of local governments’ role in industrial promotion has become apparent. Rather than increasing investments, the subsidies merely relocate investment from one city to the next, without national gains. In the absence of a subsidy, market forces would drive the location decision of the enterprise. This type of competition among cities also favors local governments, typically in rich regions with more discretionary revenues, and this “beggar thy neighbor” approach can affect another’s success. Industrial subsidies also can lead to a siphoning of funds away from mainstream government functions and to a horizontal inequality with unsubsidized firms. (Keen and Marchand 1997; Boadway and Shah 2009). Industrial subsidies may have merit when they are targeted at pioneer industries or technology development industries, but in these cases, the granting of the subsidies should be the function of central government. Fragmented social insurance programs (pensions and health insurance) in China increasingly become a barrier to labor mobility and inclusiveness. These programs are the responsibility of the city and county governments, are managed in a separate local government fund for social security, and are financed by payroll tax contributions and government subsidies. The national guidelines for combined employer and employee contributions are equivalent to about 40 percent of wages, but there is considerable variation among the provinces. The new urbanization model will require increased labor mobility to promote economic growth. The need to support this mobility with portability of benefits, the national nature of the benefits from these programs, and the need to focus more heavily on equalizing real incomes in the population will all push in the direction of increased central financing. China’s decentralized management and fi nancing of pensions is a significant departure from international practice. Most industrial and developing countries have centralized or largely centralized their oldage pension insurance financing programs. In general, the reasoning is that uniformity in benefits and some guaranteed minimum funding of these programs is in the national

interest. A further problem with the decentralized delivery in China is that county and some city governments cannot do the necessary risk pooling to fi nance these programs at mandated national levels. That has led to pooling at the prefecture or provincial level in some provinces. Although this broader base has reduced the risk, there still have been pension arrears and defaults that have forced continuing central and provincial government subsidies (Martinez-Vazquez and Qiao 2011). The health insurance program, being managed at the county and district level of government in China, is highly fragmented. Effective reimbursement rates vary across counties and districts, due to differences in deductibles, copayments, and ceilings. These rates in turn are a function of disparities in the levels of contributions and local government subsidies. Besides the equity concerns associated with these disparities, overall risk is higher because of the small size of these insurance pools. In addition, migrants face significant challenges in accessing health care, and there is overlap in registration in the rural and urban programs (Zheng 2012). The international practice on the centralization of health care financing is mixed. The information advantages give state or provincial governments a comparative edge in program management, and there may be a demand for local tailoring of some services. A not uncommon model is to use conditional grants from the national government to finance a significant share of subnational government expenditures on health care. In the United States, the federal government finances and delivers pensions and medical care for retirees but shares the cost of financing medical care for the poor with the state governments. Provinces have exclusive responsibility for health care provision in Canada and are supported by federal grants. The provision of public services within China’s urban areas is also more interrelated and increasingly calls for more intergovernmental cooperation in planning and service delivery. The need for better coordination is most clear in the case of transportation. Each component of the public transport system is usually of good quality, but door-to-door trips by public transport are inconvenient

385


386

URBAN CHINA

because of poor physical and service integration, often characterized by excessive distances between transfer points, mismatched schedules, separate ticketing systems, and lack of easily accessible transfer facilities. These problems stem mostly from institutional fragmentation at the city level, where different agencies (metros, buses, road construction, traffic management, and land use) are responsible for different aspects of urban transportation (see supporting report 2: Planning and Connecting Cities for Greater Diversity and Livability). In addition, ambiguous assignment for expenditure responsibilities undermines the accountability of local governments. Many industrial countries assign expenditure responsibilities to their subnational governments and provide a list of who is responsible for what, although some countries do not specify these responsibilities in a central place but rather work them out in sector laws (de Mello 2010). Unlike many countries, China has no exclusive list of functions that is reserved for either the central or the subnational governments. Rather, a very general description of responsibilities in the Constitution leaves much latitude for interpreting the division of functions. Responsibility is delegated by administrative decision and varies from province to province, leading to a lack of clarity about exactly who is responsible for what. The result can be a costly duplication in service delivery, a failure to deliver some services, or an inability to identify the level of government responsible for a public service failure. More generally, lack of clear defi nition and assignment of responsibilities can become a hotbed for either intergovernmental turf wars or buck-passing, and accountability is in no way guaranteed (Lou 2013).

Revenues Highly centralized revenue assignment also raises some important public financing problems. First, it means that subnational governments have no way to adjust the tax rate or tax base to pursue new initiatives that require resources above what they are allocated by the transfer system. These shortcomings, and the pressing needs related to urbanization,

explain some of the appeal of land-based financing in recent years. Second, the existing system leaves subnational governments vulnerable to discretionary tax policy or revenue-sharing changes by the central government. This set of vertical arrangements not only makes local revenue budgets vulnerable, but it also weakens the accountability of local government officials to both the local constituency and to the upper-level authority. Third, the absence of formal local government taxing powers has encouraged subnational governments to find creative backdoor approaches to financing service delivery. The relatively unregulated sale of land leases with retention of most revenues, and local government borrowing through intermediaries such as the LGFVs are cases in point (Bahl 1999; Wong 1997; Liu and Qiao, 2013). These problems notwithstanding, revenue centralization has worked reasonably well in China. Tax revenues and subnational government expenditures more than doubled as a share of GDP between 1994 and 2012. That explains how the central government could safely increase the income tax retention rates, and abolish some local taxes, without fear of local government budget shortfalls. But this situation may change. Increased urbanization will bring significant new expenditure pressures, and a slowdown in the economy will slow revenue growth. The land-leasing bonanza also may slow down with stronger property rights for farmers and better use of existing urban land (see supporting report 3). The absence of a way for local governments to mobilize more of their own budgetary resources may compromise their ability to deliver adequate local services and certainly will compromise their ability to deliver discretionary services of their own choosing. In addition, several issues concerning the tax structure remain. The tax structure has been further modernized since 1994. The changes have been gradual rather than the result of a “big bang� reform, but they have been effective. The general direction has been toward a more simplified system with broader tax bases, lower tax rates, and improved collection practices, and toward a heavier use of indirect taxes. The value added


FINANCING URBANIZATION

tax was converted from a production to a consumption basis beginning in 2009, the differential rates between domestic and foreign companies under the enterprise income tax were removed in 2008, the coverage of the excise tax has been expanded in recent years, resource taxes on some selected items have been shifted to an ad valorem basis, and most recently, the business tax is being absorbed into the VAT to better cover the service sector and provide relief to companies that make heavy use of service inputs. The general structure of the individual income tax has not been changed since 1994, but the threshold for payment has been continuously increased. As a result, the number of income taxpayers decreased and the rate of coverage is relatively low as compared to Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. With China’s unequal distribution of income, one might expect a more intensive use of the tax that is designed to address this issue. At the same time, China imposes a high tax rate on labor income, largely to help fi nance social insurance schemes (pensions, health, and unemployment compensation). The current level of contributions (employee and employer) is equivalent to about 40 percent of wages, which is high by international standards. There are prospects for lowering this rate by moving some noninsurance costs and pension “legacy costs” to general revenue fi nancing (see supporting report 3). Social security contributions impose perhaps the major constraint on developing a more broadly based individual income tax. Property taxation has been much discussed as an option for a major local government tax in China. Under the existing regime, China levies five taxes on property: the urban land use tax, which is levied on the physical area of the property, the real estate tax for business use, which is levied on original value, the land value added tax, which is levied on appreciation in property value, the farmland occupation tax, which is levied on area, and the deed tax, which is levied on the self-reported value of property at the time of transfer. Together, these taxes on real property account for more than 8 percent of national tax revenues (Man

2013). The current levies total 1.6 percent of GDP, well above the rate for developing countries (although below the average rate of 2.2 percent for industrial countries). The problem with the current structure is that it is a hodgepodge of taxes on the physical area and transaction values of properties with no provision for taxing updated values on an annual basis. As a result, the property tax is not used to help shape more efficient land use, to capture value created by public investments, or to provide significant support to local government budgets. Chongqing and Shanghai municipalities are implementing an experimental annual tax on residential property. The pilot is in its third year in Chongqing. Some progress has been made: the compliance rate is good, and an identification system for all properties has been completed. Shanghai authorized a property tax on owner-occupied property in 2011. However, both of the pilot projects introduce property taxation with limited coverage of properties and with a very low effective rate of taxation. The pilots do not attempt to integrate the property tax with the other forms of property taxation, and the issues of valuation and revaluation have been bypassed. The environmental levy is a “green taxation” approach (Merk and others 2012). Most resource use and pollution occurs in cities or is caused by demand from cities, which also bear some of the greatest impacts. While China has removed many environmentally harmful subsidies and other distortions in the production of energy, it has not yet fully accounted for the costs imposed on health, ecosystems, and the climate that result from resource production and use. The simplest way to impose such a charge is an energy or resource tax on water use to encourage conservation and carbon taxes that specifically place a charge on greenhouse emissions (see supporting report 7: Green Urbanization)

Intergovernmental transfers Several important problems arise with the shift of development objectives toward building a harmonious society, and the menu of issues to be addressed by intergovernmental transfers is formidable: Is the vertical alloca-

387


388

URBAN CHINA

tion (between the central and local governments) of central taxes used to support local government spending still “right,” especially given the need to cope with significant urbanization costs? Has the central government achieved the right level of equalization across local governments and is it using the right instruments to achieve this? Has the transfer system become too complicated to administer effectively? Finally, are the arrangements for sub-provincial revenue sharing in step with government objectives? Fiscal incentives. China’s version of intergovernmental transfers is different from the mainstream practice in other industrial and developing countries, largely because of its emphasis on derivation-based revenue sharing. The major shared taxes (VAT and the corporate and personal income taxes) are shared with the local governments based on the location of collection. This arrangement distorts the allocation of resources in two ways: it encourages local governments to hold on to enterprises that should move to new locations because the government derives taxes from them. In addition, the derivation-sharing arrangement disproportionally benefits large cities, because these are often the location of a firm’s headquarters and frequently the place where it pays taxes. This fiscal incentive reinforces the political incentive for industrial promotion and encourages local governments to place more emphasis on serving firms and industries and less on its core role of providing public services to residents. This pattern can easily be seen in the composition of the government’s expenditures as well as in land use. Equalization. In more recent years, the grant component of the transfer system has grown and has done a better job of reducing fiscal disparities. Wang and Herd (2013) fi nd that grants have generated equalization effects both within and between provinces. Persson and Eriksson (2006) report a similar finding based on an empirical study of the 1998–2003 period. Hofman and Guerra (2007) find that interprovincial disparities in the Human Development Index—indicators of service levels—are less than disparities in

per capita GDP. Nevertheless, the interprovincial fiscal disparities remain large and are only slightly less dispersed than those in per capita GDP. These disparities are not surprising given the wide disparities in the natural advantages of some provinces. They also suggest that the public finance system could do more to reduce them. The tax rebate grants and the general tax sharing components are decidedly counterequalizing. The latter are based on where taxes are collected rather than on where expenditure needs are greatest. Currently, the tax sharing and tax rebates together account for about 60 percent of all transfers to local governments. The higher-income provinces, where most taxes are collected, are favored under the shared tax system. The simple correlation between per capita revenue sharing transfers and per capita GDP is 0.89, indicating a systematic favoring of higher-income provinces. Equalization grants have played some role in reducing fiscal disparities. The simple correlation between per capita equalization grants and per capita GDP is –0.41, suggesting that, on average, lower-income provinces receive larger equalization grants. The equalization grants represent only 19 percent of all intergovernmental transfers, however, and therefore have not been effective in significantly reducing fiscal disparities across provinces. Complexity. The earmarked grants are extremely complicated, and this complication comes with cost. There are about 200 conditional grant programs, each of which should be monitored by higher-level governments to insure proper compliance. Conditional grants in essence are (partially) funded mandates, and unless they are properly designed to stimulate spending to capture a spillover benefit, they will compromise local government budget autonomy and may not enhance efficiency. These conditional grants also impose an administration cost on the central government and a compliance cost on the subnational government. Finally, conditional grants usually lead to strong bureaucratic and ministry interest in maintaining these programs, as well as a local government constituency, creating a formidable resistance to


FINANCING URBANIZATION

abolishing these programs when they are no longer necessary (Blom-Hansen 2010). Subprovincial transfers. Provincial governments have considerable discretion to place revenues where they are seen as most needed. A provincial government might decide to adopt equalizing distributions across local governments or choose an investment stimulation strategy. China is too large a country to govern effectively without this provincial discretion. But this hierarchical arrangement for revenue sharing also presents some problems. The provincial government may pick off too great a share for itself, at least in the eyes of the lower-level governments, or it may not make the subprovincial allocations on a needs basis. In particular, provincial governments may not adequately recognize the needs of city and county governments to deal with financing problems associated with urbanization. Yet the information advantages concerning expenditure delivery and tax collection may well be greatest at the lowest levels of government. And, more generally, the problems that come with delivering services to accommodate urbanization and financing them will fall heavily on the cities, but equalization objectives of a province might tend to redirect funding away from cities. Another problem with this hierarchical approach is that subprovincial allocations may compromise central government policy objectives. For example, the central government might adopt a program of allocating revenues among provinces according to expenditure needs indicators. But the provincial government might decide to distribute them among cities and counties according to where revenues are collected. This possibility opens the door for a discussion about whether central grants to provinces ought to contain more mandates about how the central funds should be passed through to provincial governments.

Financing infrastructure investment China’s infrastructure financing model is astounding, given how much revenue has been mobilized to finance infrastructure over the past 20 years. China spent around

10 percent of GDP a year on infrastructure investment, far higher than 3– 4 percent average of other developing countries, or 2 percent average in developed countries. In addition, China’s investments in schools, hospitals, cultural centers, and public housing have gained momentum with the shift of government development strategy toward building a harmonious society. Remarkably, the urbanization of new territories on urban-rural fringes proceeded mainly with physical infrastructure being built ahead of or in sync with demand for land from developers, through an urban “big push.” China’s cities not only successfully accommodated 500 million new residents between 1980 and 2010 but also achieved significant improvements in basic infrastructure and living standards. For instance, access to piped water in China urban areas doubled in three decades, the wastewater treatment rate increased from almost none in 1981 to 84 percent by 2011, and the road surface area per capita increased seven times during the same period. Local governments in China take almost exclusive responsibility for urban infrastructure investments and financing. As table 6.3 shows, China invested RMB 5.9 trillion in fixed assets for public utilities, infrastructure, and facilities in 2011, equivalent to 12.5 percent of GDP. More than 80 percent of this investment was sponsored by local governments and their entities. The central government played a dominant role in financing railway investment (85 percent) and a relatively large role in gas supply (37 percent), but it played a negligible role in urban infrastructure. The investments in city connections (railways and expressways) are generally the responsibilities of the central and provincial governments.11 Regarding the sources of infrastructure fi nancing, the Chinese model shows several salient features: • User charges in China, including tolls, water tariffs, and garbage collection fees, are widely applied to finance infrastructure services. But they often achieve low rates of cost recovery, despite the central government’s policies and guidance that encourage utilities to be self-financing. For

389


390

URBAN CHINA

TABLE 6.3 China’s investment in public utilities, infrastructure and facilities, 2011 Percentage of total investment By investment

By source of funding

Total volume (RMB, billions)

Central

Local

Budget

Bank loans

Others

Public utilities Power Gas Water Transportation Railway Roads City transport Public facilities Subtotal: utilities and infrastructure Irrigation and environment Education, health, cultural, and sports facilities Public administration

1465.9 1160.3 124.4 181.1 2490.2 591.5 1385.6 222.5 1950.6 5906.7 501.5

30.5 37.2 11.3 1.2 24.7 85.3 3.5 1.9 1.0 18.3 11.6

69.5 62.8 88.7 98.8 75.3 14.7 96.5 98.1 99.0 81.7 88.4

6.3 5.5 2.0 14.9 13.6 11.5 17.0 8.4 13.3 11.6 25.2

31.3 35.9 15.5 11.8 34.8 44.9 30.0 52.5 15.2 27.5 10.6

62.4 58.6 82.5 73.3 51.6 43.7 53.0 39.1 71.5 60.9 64.1

790.0 564.8

3.9 5.6

96.1 94.4

19.1 23.5

7.8 4.5

73.1 72.1

Total

7763.0

15.5

84.5

14.1

22.7

63.2

Data Source: China Statistic Yearbook, 2012.

example, a recent study of approximately 600 urban water utilities showed that only 44 percent generated positive net margins, even though real tariffs had grown 3.7 percent annually over the previous five years (World Bank n.d.). Continued government subsidies provided the necessary financing in most cases. • Only a fraction of infrastructure investment is financed directly from government budget. Government expenditures on fixed assets were equivalent to roughly 5 percent of GDP in 2009; about 1.5 percent of GDP was spent on investments in utilities and infrastructure, accounting for 11.6 percent of total investments in these sectors (see table 6.3). • Land lease revenues have emerged as an indispensable source of capital financing for China’s city infrastructure investment. During 1996–2012, a total of 50,000 square kilometers were converted from rural to urban use (and from collective to state ownership). An estimated 40 percent of these lands were for industrial use, and local governments often charge low rent for industrial land. The majority of the land for commercial and residential use is auctioned in a competitive bidding, and revenues

from the auction are used for infrastructure investment. In 2012 alone, China acquired RMB 2.85 trillion from land auctions, equivalent to 46.7 percent of total public finance revenues of local governments.12 The net revenue, after deducting compensation to farmers and land development costs, is much smaller, however, only around 20 percent of gross revenues. • China imposes strict restrictions on the borrowing powers of local governments.13 To circumvent this regulation, local governments have set up around 10,000 LGFVs to borrow and fi nance infrastructure investments.14 Local government borrowing proliferated to finance stimulus packages amid the 2008–09 global fi nancial crisis. By end-June 2013, the explicit debts of local governments amounted to RMB 10.9 trillion; local government guaranteed debts, RMB 2.67 trillion; and other contingent debts, RMB 4.3 trillion, with the total around 33 percent of GDP. • Private participation in infrastructure services is still limited compared with other developing countries, despite encouragement from the central government. Since 1990, while China had over 1,000 public-private partnership (PPP) transac-


FINANCING URBANIZATION

tions in infrastructure (transport, water, energy) for a total value of $166 billion (Private Participation in Infrastructure, or PPI Database), Brazil and India had much larger private investment in infrastructure during the same period, $325 billion and $273 billion respectively. Notwithstanding the success, a number of important problems have arisen, ranging from concerns about poor investment choices made by some local governments to overinvestment in infrastructure compared with other urban services, urban sprawl, social and equity issues surrounding the practices in transferring farmland to urban use, and the level of land-based debt that is implicitly guaranteed by local governments.15 The first concern relates to the role of financing in shaping local governments’ incentives and capacity for selecting, designing, and providing infrastructure projects. Enormous infrastructure investment in China is generally justified by the rapid rate of urbanization and high growth of income; however, some of these infrastructure investments are driven by distorted incentives of government officials. Because their tenure is short—often less than five years, local government and party officials depends largely on achieving short-term economic development targets and visible results to advance their career. Short of alternative revenues, local governments resorted to land-concession revenue and unregulated borrowing from LGFVs. While the use of land-based revenues for capital finance should reduce overall capital financing risk, overreliance on land fi nance, together with distorted incentives, contributes to inefficient use of land, corruption, and abuse of government power in land acquisition. Municipal governments may even act like profit-maximizing land monopolists, by acquiring as much land as possible as cheaply as possible at the urban fringe, converting it into municipally owned urban land, and selling the land use rights to developers at the highest price the market will bear, potentially contributing to a land asset bubble. Economic distortions are compounded by deliberate government policies that assign zero or low values to land as

an incentive to attract industrial investments and that then heavily invest in infrastructure to service these newly developed lands. This urban development strategy led to a pattern of urban sprawl that is costly and has channeled interest away from more compact, infilling strategies for urban growth. The strategy also can increase carbon emissions because it generates longer commutes and less use of mass transit, increases living space per person and therefore more emissions from home heating and general power consumption, and leads to less intensively used infrastructure, which in turn raises emission levels (Baeumler, Ijjasz-Vasquez, and Mehndiratta 2012; Z. Liu and Salzberg 2012). Local governments’ capacity in selecting and designing good and appropriate infrastructure is also handicapped by a fragmented budget and lack of a medium-term perspective in financial management. City governments tend to spend more on new infrastructure and less on maintenance and operation; more on above-ground infrastructure such as roads, transportation, and public gardens and less on underground infrastructure like sewage systems and flood protection. Chronic underinvestment in maintenance and repair shortens the lifetime of assets, which, in turn, increases long-term costs, which can threaten the long-term sustainability of cities. Capital fi nance is conducted ad hoc, on a project-by-project basis, and through multiple intertwined channels including many government bureaus, LGFVs and their subsidiaries, and many other public utilities firms. Not all investments in property and infrastructure are accounted for and reported on the government books (box 6.1). Economic classification is not introduced in budget management, and the budget is managed on an annual basis. The lack of a multiyear and integrated budget prevents local governments from more effective public investment planning. If investment plans were supplemented with a full-cost budgeting plan over the life span of the project (cost of construction plus future costs of operation and maintenance and asset renewal), some of the investments would not be justified from a cost-effectiveness basis (Mikesell and Mullins 2011; Kaganova and Windolph 2012).

391


392

URBAN CHINA

BOX 6.1

Reporting and budgeting of infrastructure finance

Government budgets have four separate components. The largest is the “public fi nance budget”— the general fund that is reported in most statistical compilations. The recurrent expenditures of government (other than social security) are recorded in this account, as are the ordinary revenues raised by the local government. Most expenditure on urban infrastructure facilities is made through the “Government Fund budget.” The main fi nancing source for this budget is land revenues. The “state-owned enterprise operating fund budget” is for transfers of dividends from enterprises owned by governments to the general budget. Finally, the social security budget includes the pension, health, and worker protection programs and the payroll contributions and subsidies that finance these programs. These four budgets are managed by many different departments, an arrangement that presents a

challenge to efficient public financial management. In particular, current and capital expenditures appear in all of the accounts, but government departments do not record or report their activities by economic classification not separating current and capital expenditures), making it difficult to track the overall budget health of the local government. Moreover, the local government budget is intertwined with the budgets of local government fi nancing vehicles and public utilities enterprises, and a substantial portion of capital investment made with public funding might not be reflected in the municipal budget as such. Thus, capital construction by stateowned enterprises themselves is not shown in the municipal budget, even though it is funded, at least partly, by subsidies and transfers from the municipal budget. Furthermore, the private sector’s contribution through various channels is impossible to estimate.

The second concern with China’s fi nancing model is equity. The policy on how to pay for the infrastructure investments—from general budget revenue, user charges and connection fees, or debt finance—has direct implications about who will ultimately bear the cost of infrastructure. Subsidies to utilities of a private goods nature, such as water and electricity, not only come at the cost of lower economic efficiency but also tend to be regressive, as wealthier households, who consume disproportionately more, receive the largest share of the benefit. When infrastructure services are financed from land-concession revenues, those who use the services benefit at the expense of the previous owners of the land use rights, who were forced to sell at a rate well below market price, or of citizens in general who are the ultimate owners of the land, depending on how one looks at it. In addition, neither the collective nor the farmers may sell land to end users, and the user rights of farmland owners are only weakly guarded. Only the local government can convert farmland to urban use. Local governments use their monopoly powers to claim farmland at a value reflecting agricultural use, which is well below the

market value of urban land. In many cases, the land is expropriated, further raising the level of unrest among those with user rights over farmland (see supporting report 4, China’s Urbanization and Land: A Framework for Reform). If infrastructure investment were financed only from savings on the general budget, cities would not be able to meet the rising demand from urbanization. In addition, financing only from savings would raise intergenerational equity problems, because the infrastructure investment benefits future generations while the costs would be borne by the current generation of taxpayers. With urban migrants likely to make up a large portion of future generations, fi nancing totally from savings further raises the social unrest between existing residents and migrants.16 The third concern is the potentially serious risk to fiscal sustainability. The absence of a strong regulatory regime governing borrowers, land fi nance, debt fi nance, and PPP entails fiscal risks. Land-based revenues for capital finance complement borrowing by reducing the uncertainty surrounding future debt repayment capacity and the need to generate future


FINANCING URBANIZATION

revenue streams to meet future debt service. Thus the use of land-based revenues for capital finance should reduce overall capital fi nancing risk. Because, however, urban land values are highly volatile, land financing creates volatility in capital budgets and debt repayment funds. Land prices can swing as much as 50 percent in either direction, and in times of crisis even more, as demonstrated during the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s and again during the market collapse starting in 2008. Systemic risks are increased when the entire subnational sector relies heavily on land values to provide security for borrowing (L. Liu and Peterson 2013). China’s overall public debt, including sovereign and local government debt, is low by international standards. The sovereign debt remained at around 18 percent of GDP at the end of June 2013 (or 22.7 percent if all contingent debts are included). By including an estimate of the local government debt based on a report by the National Audit Office, the overall direct and contingent public debt was about 55.6 percent of GDP, far below the most conservative warning line—60 percent of GDP (table 6.4). In addition, several factors will work to improve China’s debt dynamics in the future. China’s large growth potential creates the foundation for further growth of real revenues and favorable debt dynamics. China’s government commands a large portion of assets including shares in state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and land, which represent a source of potential revenues going forward. Large national savings coupled with investment-grade sovereign risk ratings imply a relatively low cost of borrowing (L. Liu and Pradelli 2013). Concerns, however, remain with local government borrowing. The audit in 2013

found that local government direct debts continued to grow fast, at a yearly rate around 20 percent from 2010 to 2013, and the refinancing ratio exceeded 20 percent in 2 provinces, 31 municipals, 29 counties, and 148 townships. The overdue debt ratio was 1.01 percent on average, but it exceeded 10 percent in some cities and reached 16.36 percent in the worst local government. International experience suggests that subnational debt risk is triggered by the sheer size of the debts but also is more broadly associated with local governments’ capacity in managing their debt portfolio and formulating fiscal policies in a sustainable manner. In China, under the current system, the separation of subnational government debt from its budget undermines the accountability of local governments for debt sustainability, especially when debt is used to fi nance expenditures mandated by the central government such as the post-2008 stimulus package and affordable housing. The fragmented budgeting and indirect borrowing also prevent local governments from establishing proper debt management and control. To improve their access to credit and lower financing costs, some local governments have taken measures to reinforce the perception of an implicit guarantee on LGFV debt and have tapped into less regulated credit markets, known as “shadow banking.” Some local governments resorted to PPPs as a source of capital fi nancing and built up substantial risks emanating from these commitments. Meanwhile, creditors, including bank and others, fail to impose hard budget constraints on local governments. There appears to be little market scrutiny of underlying financial conditions of LGFVs or local governments and little information upon which to base

TABLE 6.4 China public debt, June 2013 RMB, billions Contingent debt

Central Local Total

Direct debt

Guaranteed debt

Other contingent debt

Subtotal

9,813 10,886 20,699

260 2,666 2,926

2,311 4,339 6,650

12,384 17,891 30,275

Data Source: National Audit Office, 2013.

Share of GDP

22.7% 32.8% 55.6%

393


394

URBAN CHINA

such judgment. Most urban infrastructure lending by banks and others is based on the reputation of the LGFV and an implied guarantee that the local government will not let the borrower fail. As a result, there is a lack of transparency and objectivity in the financing process. In the absence of credit ratings for borrowers, it is difficult to see how regulators can reasonably assess the portfolio risk profi le of the banks and institutional investors. In such a situation, lenders and investors have no expectation of negative consequences for lending to poor credit risk borrowers and poor credit decisions predominate in an atmosphere of moral hazard. Overreliance on bank loans as an instrument for local government borrowing has

BOX 6.2

intensified the debt-refi nancing risk. By the end of June 2013, banks had financed about 56.6 percent of local governments’ debt, and bond issuance in the capital markets had financed only 10.3 percent (box 6.2). Because the repayment period for bank loans tends to be shorter (two to five years) than that for bonds, the debt cannot be fully amortized in such short time spans and must be rolled over (refi nanced) when it matures. Debt management that relies on continuous refinancing when principal payments come due is dangerous, especially in a market setting. The willingness of banks or other lenders to roll over existing debt at maturity depends on multiple factors, many of which are beyond a local government’s ability to control. An inability

Local governments’ debt instruments

Local governments in China have been very innovative in exploring a variety of debt instruments: • Medium-term loans from the China Development Bank (CDB), which derives some of its funding from the capital market using Policy Financial (“F”) Bonds that have a 5- to 10-year maturity. The CDB has provided a significant volume of fi nancing for urban infrastructure. According to an article in May 2013 by the president of the CDB, the bank has already made RMB 6 trillion in loans to fi nance China’s urbanization process.a More than half of those loans—RMB 3.4 trillion—were outstanding at the end of 2012 and represented 71 percent of the bank’s total outstanding loans. • Commercial medium-term bank loans to local government fi nancing vehicles (LGFVs) (mostly 3- to 5-year loans) that carry an implicit guarantee from the local government. • Bonds issued by the Ministry of Finance on behalf of provinces (mostly 3- to 5-year bonds). • Bonds issued by LGFVs (implicitly guaranteed by the local government). In some cases LGFVs borrow solely for the purpose of de facto relending to the local government. Expansion and diversification of the domestic bond market is already taking place in a tentative manner.

• Bonds issued directly by city governments in a very limited number of cases (mostly 3- to 5-year bonds). Since 2011, four local governments (Guangdong, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Zhejiang) have been allowed to issue their own bonds and two more provinces (Jiangsu and Shandong) were expected to enter the bond market in 2013. So far, the market entry and volume of bond issuance has been carefully controlled by the Ministry of Finance, and that has increased in 2013 to RMB 70 billion, up from RMB 28.9 billion in 2012. • Public-private partnerships ranging from concessions to joint ventures and build-own-operate schemes. • Funds raised through shadow banking vehicles such as wealth management products, trust funds, and other collective investment schemes. Despite this array of financing sources, the Chinese financial markets continue to be both bankdominated (accounting for 56.6 percent of local government debts in June 2013) and restricted in scope, with few long-term financing instruments and a limited number of large institutional investors. The magnitude of capital market fi nancing for urban infrastructure remains small relative to bank financing even as bonds issued by urban development investment corporations have become a growing portion of the bond market.

Source: Painter 2013. a. As reported in “China Development Bank Says $8.1 Trillion Needed for Urban Shift,” Bloomberg News, May 20, 2013.


FINANCING URBANIZATION

to roll over debt, in turn, can precipitate a local government budget crisis, or in some cases even a financial crisis such as Brazil experienced in the 1980s. Such liquidity risk is also related to the scarcity of long-term financing instruments and the underdevelopment of the Chinese capital market. China’s authorities recognize the potential risks arising from local government debt if liabilities are left hidden and uncontained. In June 2010, the State Council issued a circular (Guo Fa 19) on enhancing the control over LGFVs. A joint task force was established to verify and catalogue the LGFVs and their debts. The Ministry of Finance, the National Development and Reform Commission, the People’s Bank of China, and the China Bank Regulation Commission have all issued a series of regulations and guidelines to regulate local government and LGFV borrowing behavior. Many local governments have also launched pilot reforms to improve their debt management framework. Much more remains to be done, however, to improve the fi nancial intermediation process for long-term debt fi nancing and put local government fi nancing on a sustainable foundation. The fourth concern relates to the impact of the existing financing model on market and private sector developments. The central government has signaled that it wants to promote greater market orientation in infrastructure finance, using market-rate debt fi nancing where appropriate as well as encouraging private investment in infrastructure facilities. Both domestic private and foreign investment would be permitted for nearly all forms of infrastructure, particularly in water supply and wastewater treatment, through sole investment, cooperative enterprises, joint ventures, share purchase, or franchise. In particular, nonpublic capital is encouraged in building, operating, and managing public utilities.17 Local governments, however, with easy access to borrowing through LGFVs, are less keen to use PPPs. To improve their access to borrowing, some local governments even combine public investment projects that generate insufficient cash inflows with profitmaking activities. Such practices blur the

division between the government and the market and create distortions that may do more harm to overall economic efficiency than is gained from the public infrastructure fi nanced. These practices encourage LGFVs and public utility enterprises to manipulate their relationships with government to secure their monopoly power in an otherwise competitive market. They also create distorted incentives for local governments to protect their entities from competition from private firms. Local governments generally lack the needed capacity to manage PPP contracts. These contracts require identifying the true cost of infrastructure and utilities, but, as discussed, the current reporting of and budgeting for infrastructure finance are deficient and unable to reveal the true cost of infrastructure projects. The cost of traditional publicly financed projects is often underrecorded, which may create an illusion about the efficiency of public utility firms. Managing the bidding process is another challenge. Open bidding could mitigate the information disadvantage of a local government, but it sometimes fails to reveal the true cost of infrastructure projects owing to the moral hazard of private partners; for example, a private partner may offer a low price on expectation that it will be able to renegotiate the tariff or subsidies after winning a PPP contract. The absence of a clear legal and regulatory framework for PPP management also discourages private investors. There are 54 policy acts related to PPP in China’s legal system, each dealing with different aspects of a single project such as finance, foreign investment, tendering, and bidding processes. This multiplicity of laws causes a multitude of regulations and a complex legal environment for PPP projects even within a single sector.18 The disconnection between central and local policies further aggravates this fragmented approach,19 leading not only to different ways of implementing PPPs in different places but also to an array of different ministries and bureaus that may be involved in PPP implementation and ultimately discouraging participation by private companies (Wu 2013).

395


396

URBAN CHINA

Financing affordable housing China’s policies have been successful in increasing the per capita housing space even as China’s urban population increased to more than 50 percent of the total. Between 1985 and 2007, urban residential space per capita had risen to 28.3 square meters from 7 square meters. The larger size is greater than the averages in Europe and Japan (Man, Zheng, and Ren 2011). Housing prices have escalated dramatically, however, making it difficult for lowand middle-income households, those moving from rural areas to urban areas, and young workers to buy a home. Housing prices in China’s cities became very high in relationship to incomes. Internationally, a price-income ratio of 5:1 or more is considered unaffordable. While the average priceincome average in 600 Chinese cities was 5:1, in major cities it was much higher. In Shanghai, for instance, the ratio was 28.4:1 and in Beijing, over 30.1:1.20 The lack of affordable housing for low- and middle-income urban households in China, particularly in big cities, poses risks and challenges to a stable and harmonious society and impedes labor mobility. Therefore, the development of affordable housing programs became a central focus on the government reform agenda. China is in the midst of an ambitious program of affordable housing construction. Under the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011–15), the central government mandated that 36 million units of affordable housing be built, with the objective of reaching 20 percent of the total urban population. It then developed a formula through which each municipality was required to build a certain number of units to standards set by the central government, which provided very little funding for this effort. China’s construction effort contains both rental and owned housing in five broad categories to accommodate the diverse urban population (box 6.3). Affordable rental housing is particularly needed in major cities where owning a house is out of the reach of most families. The defi nition of what types of housing qualify as affordable is very broad and without clear policy objectives except for growth. The target markets range from

very low income workers to young professionals with technology skills to middleincome families. The housing is variously called “low-income” housing, “affordable” or “subsidized” housing, or “social” housing, conflating the difference between social housing and more broadly based government-assisted housing. The categorization of qualifying units is so broad that providing a unit that is 10 percent below market value to a high-skilled technical employee and a lowrent unit to a migrant worker both count as affordable housing. Housing with price caps is making a resurgence in high-cost cities, such as Beijing, but the practice raises the question of subsidy capture. The concept seems simple: auction land to developers with a pre-defi ned price cap on the sales price of the housing units. Unfortunately, international experience has shown that developers can build out the units to a lower-quality standard and, therefore, can capture most of the subsidies, defeating the purpose of the subsidy. A lack of a strong appraisal industry indicates that the land price could be artificially inflated over the true market price before the discount is applied. The formula for housing construction allocation is driven by the central government, not market conditions. The central government provides the range and level of coverage, the means of allocation and administration, and access and exit mechanisms, and it also contains stipulations concerning the planning, design, size, quality and safety requirements of low-income housing projects. Market studies are not required, and municipalities are judged on their progress in meeting the quantitative goals, not on the success of the projects. (Gao and Wang 2012). New housing construction may have a negative impact on labor mobility. Since the municipalities are responsible for the cost of construction, much of the new housing built is on the periphery of the cities where land prices are much lower, but where residents are farther from transportation and jobs. In Mexico City, commuting costs from newly constructed housing on the outskirts of the city have caused an estimated 20 percent of the housing to be abandoned.


FINANCING URBANIZATION

BOX 6.3

Basic concept and categories of affordable housing in China

Economically affordable housing. Economically affordable housing refers to a special category of housing sold to lower-income families at subsidized prices. Qualified purchasers must meet several requirements, including income level, hukou registration, and certain housing conditions. Units are limited to 60 square meters and are sold to qualified families at below-market price, often 25 percent to 40 percent below the price of comparable ordinary commodity housing. The government generally provides land for affordable housing construction, allowing such units to be sold at a discounted price relative to the market price. Owing to heavy subsidies by the government, homeowners are permitted to sell the unit only under certain conditions: they usually cannot sell for the fi rst five years they own the home, and they may be required to sell the house back to the local housing authority with joint share of the increase in value. Price-capped commodity housing. Housing prices are so high that even middle-income families could hardly afford to buy their own dwelling. Thus, some cities initiated a housing assistance program targeted at urban middle-income families. In this program, the housing price is higher than that in economic commodity housing but lower than that in ordinary commodity housing. Units are limited to 90 square meters. Similar to economic commodity housing, homeowners have to meet certain conditions before they are allowed to sell their units. Low-income rental housing. Such housing is owned by the government and leased to very poor urban hukou residents at below-market rates. This low-rent public housing program is part of the official social security program and is primarily financed using the budget of the local government. In recent years, direct fi nancial transfer from the central government

has increased. After several years of implementation, the program now covers most of these poor urban residents (with hukou registration), especially families with elderly or disabled members. Some lowincome families can rent housing in the market with government subsidies, as part of the low-rental housing program. Public rental housing. This new form of affordable housing started in 2009 to cater to the demands of households with income levels falling between the required thresholds for economic housing and lowrent housing. Public rental housing mostly serves low- and moderate-income families and has lowerthan-market rent for the houses of the same quality. This scheme is the fi rst attempt to use rental housing to solve the housing problem of families. It focuses on relieving the stress of fi nding housing from local young staff and migrant workers who have relatively low incomes. Unlike low-rent housing, public-rent housing in some cities can be sold to the tenants after they satisfy certain requirements, such as a residency period, income cap, and compensation to the government. Shanty-town resettlement. The resettlement of shanty town residents constitutes a major component of China’s affordable housing construction plan. This form of affordable housing is aimed at improving the well-being of low- and middle-income households living in areas considered shanty towns. Resettlement occurs when the government needs land for a development and plans to tear down the existing housing. Relocated families may be offered affordable housing, price-capped commodity housing, or a cash settlement. In cases where the existing property is of significant value, the current residents are sometimes given more than one housing unit.

Source: World Bank 2013b.

Housing policies may also have a negative impact on social cohesion. Those who can afford the housing prices will have housing options in the center cities. Those who do not will fi nd their housing further away. In the United States, the model of tall towers in lowcost and often isolated locations led to such physical and safety problems that many had to be demolished.

The affordable housing construction system is a type of unfunded mandate. While the central government sets the goal for affordable housing construction, the responsibility for financing these projects rests primarily on the municipalities and on the local housing provident funds. According to a JP Morgan study, of the RMB 1.4 trillion needed to meet the policy goals for 2011, the central govern-

397


398

URBAN CHINA

ment provided only RMP 170.5 billion in 2011, including RMB 28 billion carried forward from 2010. The municipalities’ provision of land at discounted prices or of net income from land transfers for the construction of affordable housing projects is both an opportunity and a challenge. On the one hand, current revenues increased. Between 1999 and 2007, the amount of land sold for development grew by 23 percent a year and fees for leasing by municipalities rose by nearly one-third annually (Ministry of Land and Resources 2008). On the other hand, land is a limited resource, so land sales cannot continue indefinitely, creating vulnerabilities for the cities, particularly if the projects ultimately fail or cost more than anticipated. The use of housing provident funds for project fi nance has grown rapidly. HPFs— mandatory long-term savings funds established to help fund members fi nance housing—are permitted to use up to 50 percent of their “surplus funds” for social housing construction. The interest rates on the construction loans are set 10 percent higher than five-year mortgages used for individual home purchases, which is far below the development lending interest rate of commercial banks. The use of these funds has grown from a pilot project in 2009 with 29 HPFs providing project financing, to 93 HPFs that had pledged RMB 41.2 billion for affordable housing development and had used RMB 31.2 billion by the end of 2012. The calculation of the provident fund “surplus” is based on the HPF’s current financial status, and is not subject to any type of stress test, creating potential vulnerabilities in the funds and in the real estate markets. The “surplus” is determined by the current surplus, deducting for loan risk reserves and administrative expenses. A project that fails will decrease the liquidity of the fund, which, in turn, will decrease the amount of funds available for mortgage loans. The amortization period for many HPF project loans is greater than 10 years, adding additional liquidity pressure. Financing the construction of rental housing is more akin to project fi nance than it is to mortgage lending. A lender must evaluate the business applying for the loan, including

its management, its track record, the financial position of the owners or of the corporation, the market, the potential risks, and the competition. Evaluating the market is particularly critical because the lending institution must look at vacancy rates in the target market, local laws and regulations, and the overall economy in the areas served. It must assess potential developments that could affect the market, such as a factory closing, which would have a negative effect on the evaluation, or a new commercial and retail development, which would have a positive effect. Housing provident funds and governmental entities rarely have the training to perform these evaluations and are therefore dependent on the developer’s information. The current approach to financing affordable housing in China carries great risks, particularly to the cities and to the housing provident funds. In countries with high housing costs, it is nearly impossible for low-rent housing to be sustained without deep demand-side subsidies. Even if land and infrastructure are provided, the cash flows from the rents are highly unlikely to cover all of the costs, particularly in low-cost rentals. Cost savings on the front end can lead to faster deterioration, creating a downward spiral of lower occupancy and higher maintenance costs. Municipalities are given little incentive to build low-rent housing that can be sustainable over time. They are responsible for all of the costs of building, managing, and maintaining housing. They can charge higher rents for slightly-below-market public rental housing than they can for low-rent housing, creating a much greater possibility for positive cash flow. Conversely, they will have to fi nd additional sources of revenue to cover any losses on low-rent housing projects. Therefore, it is in their economic interests to build fewer low-rent units than public rental units. Expenses for the operation of publicly supported rental housing are underestimated, as they are in many countries. While analyses have been performed on the cost of constructing subsidized rental housing, managers of rental housing interviewed for an earlier study believed that the rents would be sufficient to cover all expenses. While that might


FINANCING URBANIZATION

possibly be true for units whose rent is close to market price, it is almost never true for lower-income rental housing. In either case, the only way to determine the sufficiency of rent projections is to have detailed fi nancial statements prepared based on projected income, less an estimate for vacancies, less expenses including all maintenance, operational, and management costs and reserves for replacements of capital items. In Dalian, the rent revenue is expected to cover only loan payments, but not property management and maintenance costs. The gap will have to be filled by HPF annual supplements for low-rent housing. While China does indeed have standards for new construction, there is no system for monitoring the physical conditions over time or for correcting any deficiencies that exist. Moreover, the pressure to keep costs down during construction can lead to faster deterioration than with market rate housing. Lessons learned in the United States are applicable here. Tall towers in isolated locations with too little capital or staff to manage and maintain them deteriorated into slum housing with unsafe and unhealthy conditions. Eventually, properties in Baltimore, Chicago, Newark, Philadelphia, San Francisco, and other cities were demolished.

Reform considerations for China To support the new urbanization model, urban finance needs to be reformed. The centerpiece of the reform will be moving toward a system that more clearly separates the traditional function of government—the provision of equitable and efficient levels of public services and regulation—from the investment and production functions of other sectors. The local government leadership evaluation system would need to be altered to reflect this change in the government role. And China needs to move from benign neglect of local borrowing to a rule-based system that is strictly enforced. A modernization of the approach to financing will require changes in both financing and regulation. The public finance system will need to support the movement of people

and enterprises to the places where they are most productive, not to where they get the best tax or land deal from local government. It will also need to accommodate the integration of migrants and their families into urban areas. Revenues from land conversion are likely to taper off, requiring replacement with new sources of local revenue, whereas properly regulated access to borrowing will be needed to finance infrastructure investment. The financial sector will need to intermediate capital efficiently to meet local governments’ needs for infrastructure fi nance, and at the same time impose financial discipline on local governments and avoid fi nancial sector disruption. The private sector can play a larger role in financing and delivering infrastructure investment and other public services. Aligning the urban finance system with the changing development objectives involves reforms across a variety of interrelated systems, including the public finance regime, land finance, financial intermediaries, and private sector development. For example, changing expenditure assignments is important but will call for changes in the distribution of intergovernmental transfers because local governments might end up with more or less budget responsibility. In turn, losses from the redistribution of transfers might need to be compensated by increased local taxing powers or the ability to increase user charges. Reform of the land conversion program raises the question of whether local governments should be allowed to borrow directly. Should local government be allowed to borrow, the demand for credit needs must be met by supply, which leads to question whether intermediaries can play such a role. These examples suggest that the right longrun goal is not to address a single issue but to implement a comprehensive reform agenda. Some elements of the reform—such as the reassignment of some expenditure responsibilities—might be accomplished in the short run. Others might be phased in beginning in the provincial cities and moving later to other cities, and yet others may be implemented only over the longer run. In this way, the comprehensive reform package proposed in this report could be introduced gradually and over time.

399


400

URBAN CHINA

To manage the process of comprehensive reform, China needs a stronger, more transparent and streamlined public fi nance management and governance system. To get the best value out of public money, this improved system would need to bring a medium-term perspective to fi nancing, link budgets with development plans, and allow government to strategically allocate resources and improve the efficiency and effectiveness of public expenditures. This transparent system could allow the government to communicate the reform agenda to citizens and gain their support; the government’s credibility and trust with citizens could also be improved through linking the budget with performance. The government structure could be streamlined by removing the prefecture level as a tier of regional government. This section elaborates on the key components of the comprehensive reform package. These components are organized by the sources of funding, namely public finance, land fi nance, housing provident funds, public-private partnerships, and debt finance. Financial management and governance issues are also discussed. All these components are integrated, so it is important to understand how they fit together, as well as the joint impact they might have on the economy.

Rationalizing public finance The reform agenda of public fi nance system should be centered on three major tasks: reassigning the expenditure responsibilities to better manage the externalities in a more urbanized economy; rationalizing revenues to correct the distortion of fiscal incentives and fi nance expenditure needs related to urbanization; and building a rule-based tax-sharing and transfer system to address the disparity concern.

Reassign the expenditure responsibilities A first priority for the fiscal system is to achieve greater clarity in the division of functional responsibility among the various levels of government. In China, most of the ambiguity in expenditure assignments under the existing system derives from a “concurrent”

responsibility list, that is, functions that are the responsibility of more than one level of government. While concurrency is to some extent inevitable, because some functions do require shared responsibility, the goal of this reform will be to minimize it in service delivery. Reducing overlap in government functions could reduce costs as well as unproductive coordination efforts. More broadly, clarity on expenditure assignment is required for a better design of the intergovernmental fiscal system, to ensure that resources are available at the level of government that has the responsibility for delivering a specific service. There is wisdom in the old adage that “finance follows function.” Until expenditure responsibilities are sorted out, it is not possible to put a rational financing plan in place (Bahl and Martinez-Vazquez 2006). In getting the expenditure assignment right, China may need to weigh the gains from local control against the gains from technical efficiency, and from internalizing external costs and benefits. A task force supported by considerable staff should be charged to analyze all functions of government. Each subfunction of government function might be subjected to the same test: do the gains from decentralization—better servicing of local needs and circumstances— outweigh the advantages from centralization—the ability to capture economies of scale and internalize interjurisdictional externalities? Even with this principle to follow, the work of dividing the competencies between the levels of government will be as much art and politics as science. Factors such as preferences of individuals for services, externalities resulting from local decisions or imposed on local areas, and even economies of scale are not easily measured, if they are measureable at all. The effects on equity must be defined and weighted, administrative questions must be considered, and culture will play a role. And always, there is politics. Based on the analysis, the policy maker should rethink needed changes in the division of expenditure responsibilities between levels of government to come up with the exclusive lists. Finally, the responsibilities for each subfunction of government should be laid out in a new law, perhaps a revised budget law. That


FINANCING URBANIZATION

law will specify those functions that will be the exclusive responsibility of the central government and those that will be the exclusive responsibility of the local governments. In China, local governments perform some functions that would be better administered by the central government. Three areas are of particular concern. First, governments should continue to divest themselves of responsibilities for private sector activities, such as the management of industrial parks, the development of land for commercial purposes, and the ownership or partial ownership of enterprises that produce purely private goods. Whether local governments should maintain their role in industrial policy through tax and subsidy policies aimed at attracting industry is a more difficult issue. Many industrial countries allow this practice, even though its problems are well known. If the central government decides against allowing local governments to subsidize industry locations, it could shift to a policy of making such competitive subsidies the exclusive responsibility of the central government. That is, every subsidy to attract economic development would require central government approval. Under this regime, local governments would continue to compete with one another without central approval, but the main instrument of their competition would be the quality of services offered. If subsidies are required, as in the case for technology advancements or pioneer industries, these are more appropriately a responsibility function of the central government. The idea of centralizing the power to grant industrial subsidies in China is raised in Lou (2013). Certainly the administration of such an approval process would be difficult and costly and would invite heavy lobbying efforts. In most countries, the problem would be fi nding a way to prevent local subsidies, but in China where no local government taxation powers are in place, the policing job could be much less difficult. Irrespective of the policy choice made, the central government should clarify the policy and define what is and what is not allowed by local governments in their conduct of industrial policy. The European Union rules on support for industry (see box O.11 in the overview report) could serve as a useful example.

Second, responsibility for the financing and administration of social security functions should be rethought. An especially good case can be made for more centralization on the financing side, and for a clearer sharing arrangement between the center and the provinces on the management and fi nancing sides. Centralizing the administration of pensions would improve the mobility of labor, allow the imposition of national standards, and address important problems related to risk pooling. Old age pensions are a national function in most industrial countries and, beyond the public pension system, a private function in many countries. China might follow this model. Provincial and local variations in benefits and contribution rates are at odds with uniform standards for all Chinese citizens. The current arrangement of city and county responsibility for pensions has forced pooling to the prefecture and provincial level in many provinces, but even that has not eliminated the financial problems. Inter- and intraprovincial disparities in per capita GDP suggest that uniform national levels could not be maintained with local government funding. These pooling issues and the need for portability suggest that both equity and the removal of impediments to labor mobility would be best served if public pensions were administered by the central government—although, of course, the administration would need to be deconcentrated— that is, central government would need to maintain local offices for administration of benefits. Health insurance is a less clear-cut issue because local management of the program has benefits, and a case can be made for some local variation in the delivery of the service. But the case for central financing and the imposition of central rules is also a strong one. The central government would like all Chinese citizens to have access to the same health care services, and certainly to the same reimbursement benefits, irrespective of where they live. City and county governments, and even some provinces, do not have the resources to deliver on this promise. In addition, health insurance benefits need to be portable to remove impediments to labor

401


402

URBAN CHINA

mobility, a goal that is consistent with centralization of the financing and management. A third problem with expenditure assignment is that local governments have been assigned responsibilities that are characterized by significant interregional spillover effects. These functions and subfunctions are candidates for centralization. Detailed analysis by a government commission is likely to uncover many candidates for central assignment, but judicial services, food safety, river basin management, and environmental protection are examples of such functions.

Rationalize government revenues Government revenues need to be reassigned, based on the expenditure needs related to urbanization and on reassignment of expenditure responsibilities. On the one hand, the reassignment of expenditure responsibility will hold important implications for the financing side of the reform program. If, for example, the social security functions and certain other functions are shifted to the central government, then it might be necessary to shore up the revenue base of the central government to ensure that these costs could be covered. Should central government need to mobilize more revenues to finance increased expenditure responsibilities, it has two options. One is to transfer more SOE profits to the budget. The SOEs managed by central government are generally natural monopoly corporations, and they generate more than two-thirds of total profits made by all SOEs. If those SOEs managed by central government were to transfer only half of their profits to support the central government’s budget, the revenues generated would be roughly equivalent to 1.5 percent of GDP. The other choice is to increase the central government’s retained share of total central tax collections, that is, the value added and corporate income taxes. This policy change would also reduce the incentive for local governments to compete for the value added tax base with industrial subsidies. To manage the potential disruption to local budgets, temporary arrangements such as the Tax Return and Tax Increment Return transfers introduced

in 1994, could be considered but would need to be phased out over time. At the same time, a solid revenue base for local governments is important for reasons of efficiency and accountability. Such a foundation could be established by giving local governments some discretion to levy taxes, on certain bases and within a range of rates, and to claim all revenues raised from the new local taxes. That would bring many benefits to China. Revenue mobilization would be enhanced because local governments have information advantages that give them a comparative advantage in the collection of certain types of taxes, such as property and land taxes. A regional efficiency argument can also be made. Substituting local taxes for some intergovernmental transfers would lead to a higher tax price in the larger urban areas and force labor and capital to take that into account in making location decisions. China is struggling with urban sprawl. A system of property and land taxes could help rationalize land use patterns and provide incentives for more compact investments. Finally, there is an equalization argument, that is, as local governments in higher-income regions substitute their own taxes for intergovernmental transfers, funds will be freed up for distribution to lower-income regions. More broadly, local taxation might be a way to harden the local budget constraint and to strengthen the creditworthiness of subnational governments. With taxing powers, local governments would have the wherewithal to expand delivery of services that are in high demand or that would allow them to better capture their comparative advantage. It would also improve their creditworthiness by showing a stronger ability to service debt or to maintain public facilities. In general, local taxing powers would give local governments an instrument to use in shifting their competitive strategies from the back door to the front. Useful criteria can be applied to identify good instruments for local revenue mobilization: local taxes should be administered at reasonable cost, yield significant revenue, and not result in exporting the burden of payment to residents of other jurisdictions. A number of local revenue-raising options more or less fit the criteria.


FINANCING URBANIZATION

A property tax on housing can provide a stable revenue source that is aligned with service delivery quality and would allow local government budgets to benefit from increased land values in their jurisdiction. The property tax can fulfill two other important objectives in China: it can be both a quasi-user charge for urban services and a tax on wealth holdings in real property. Property taxes are never popular with constituents, but that is part of the rationale for those taxes: if local governments want to spend more, the burden is on them to argue their case to the taxpayers. Further, property taxes would encourage property owners to make the best possible use of their property—for instance, by renting out their apartments that are currently empty or developing unused or underused land. China should aim to make property taxes an important part of local government revenues. Even a relatively low effective tax rate of 0.5 percent on this gross measure of the tax base would yield the equivalent of 1 percent of GDP in revenues. Property taxes will not be able to fully replace current land revenues of 1.5 percent of GDP in the near future. Industrial countries raise more than 2 percent of GDP in property taxes while low- and middle-income countries raise about 0.6 percent of GDP on average (Bahl 2009). To realize the full revenue benefits from the tax, it is important to put up a good administration system with a central decision on the basic structure of the tax. The administration system should consist of identification of all parcels and their ownership, valuation and revaluation, and collection from individual owners; it also requires extensive recordkeeping and updating. A gradual introduction could start with empty apartments and unused land kept by developers. If so desired, an adjustment period could allow people that hold multiple properties to sell them to avoid future taxes. Local government taxes on the ownership and use of motor vehicles could fit China’s strategy for coping with urbanization. The rapid growth in motor vehicles compared with that of the road network has been instrumental in the growing congestion levels, higher pollution from transportation,

and longer commutes. Motor vehicle taxation could discourage the use of private cars, at the margin, while generating new revenues to defray some of the costs involved. Chinese cities could continue to use tax and charge policies to increase the price of owning and using a car relative to using a public transport system or choosing a different housing location. The revenue potential from motor vehicle taxation is considerable, and local governments could use the funds to cover the general costs of urbanization. Beijing, Guangzhou, and Shanghai have introduced vehicle ownership or usage control, or both. Some cities such as Shanghai already auction car license plates, which limits car use to sustainable levels and brings in considerable revenues (RMB 7.1 billion in 2012). Higher vehicle registration fees and excise taxes on fuels also offer considerable revenue potential, and both can be implemented with special arrangements for public transport, if local governments want to limit the impact of fuel taxes on public transport prices. A local sales tax could be charged in the cities where people live and consume. In principle, urban local governments in China could mobilize considerable resources from local sales taxes that are levied in the location where consumption occurs. If sales taxes on selected items of consumption could be made administratively feasible, they could be revenue productive and would pass some of the tests of a good local tax. That might be possible for specific items of consumption such as high-end jewelry and imported luxury goods. But for most consumer goods, a retail sales tax would encourage tax avoidance by providing an incentive to shift the point of consumption to informal traders that are not easily policed by the tax authorities. A piggyback surcharge could help avoid the administrative problems of sales taxes, by allowing the local government to select a tax rate to be imposed on a central government tax base. The piggyback approach is used to a considerable extent in industrial countries. The primary source of revenue for Swiss cities is a piggyback personal income tax; the city of Rome levies a piggyback income tax on a base defined by the central government,

403


404

URBAN CHINA

and Danish local governments tag on to an income tax base set by the central government. Local governments in many U.S. states impose a surrate on the state government retail sales tax base. At least three cities— Bangkok, Moscow, and Seoul—have their own surtax on the VAT (Martinez-Vazquez, Vulovic, and Liu 2011). Piggybacking is already done in China with the urban maintenance and construction tax (UMCT) and the education surcharge on the VAT and personal and corporate incomes taxes. The existing UMCT and education surcharge could be replaced with an “urban service tax,” and then the local government could be given the option of increasing the piggyback tax rate above its current level. The individual income tax could be added to the list of the piggyback base, but the existing individual income tax rate would need to be lowered to make a room for local piggybacking. In addition, the individual income tax, currently fragmented by different source of incomes, could be consolidated and simplified to a comprehensive individual income tax, and the location of collection could be changed from where people work to where people live. Increasing prices of urban services such as mass transit, solid waste collection, water, power, and gas to full-cost-recovery levels would ration the use of resources, enhance service sustainability, and reduce government subsidies that are required to close the financing gap. Internationally, the use of charges for government services of a largely individual nature (water, electricity) is common, and in high-income countries, those charges often cover full costs—that is, the costs of operating and maintaining the service, and a capital charge to pay for depreciation and profits. Low user charges are not a good solution to address the concern of the entitlement of all citizens to basic service, such as the minimum levels of daily water necessary for good public health; all citizens are entitled to these basic services regardless of their ability to pay. The government could use vouchers or targeted subsidies through lifeline provisions to lowincome households to pay for their minimum consumption levels. Targeting consumption subsidies in this manner reduces the municipal cost on public budgets.

China’s tax structure could be further improved. One important step would be to replace the business tax on services with a VAT, a step that authorities have already initiated. This move would encourage the growth of a services industry, because VAT on services can be deducted from the user’s VAT tax obligations. It would also encourage enterprises to outsource services to more specialized enterprises, because there would no longer be a tax advantage for keeping services in-house. The other important step is to introduce an environment protection levy on carbon emission. This tax would not only generate significant amount of revenues, but would also an important step toward developing environmental friendly cities.

Establish rule-based tax sharing and transfer Even with enhanced local government revenues, a considerable gap between expenditure responsibilities and own revenues will continue to exist at the local level. To support the new model of urbanization and economic development, the intergovernmental transfer system should be recalibrated. To motivate and enable local governments to provide equal public services to all people, urban or rural, migrant or local, a formula distribution based on expenditure needs and fiscal capacity differences would be a better approach than derivation-based revenue sharing. Changing the distribution of tax sharing from a derivation basis to a formula basis would considerably alter the outcomes for individual provinces, however, even if done gradually. Some of the losers under such a reform likely would be the richer provinces, including perhaps the larger metropolitan city-provinces. The lost revenues in some of the higher-income provinces could be replaced by increased local taxes and user charges. Therefore, reforming the intergovernmental transfer system would need to be done in tandem with reforming revenue assignments. That would make possible the replacement of lost transfers in some provinces with higher local tax revenues. To better manage the budgetary and political disruption to local governments, the reform would inevitably need to be implemented


FINANCING URBANIZATION

gradually, and the architecture of the reform must be worked out based on government objectives, administrative constraints, and politics. For example, local governments could be assigned a “target share� based on objective criteria of expenditure needs and revenue capacity, but they would only receive this incrementally, starting from their current share in the grant pool. More specifically, the reform of the transfer system should take care of three dimensions: vertical sharing, horizontal sharing, and conditional grants. The vertical sharing regime could be simplified by setting a uniform sharing rate for all central taxes. And the current collection of unconditional grants could be folded into the general revenue sharing program. By setting a uniform sharing rate against all central taxes, subnational governments would be protected from the revenue impacts of discretionary changes made by the central government. Moreover, the sharing rate in the future might be more easily reset to reflect expenditure assignments and desired incentives. In addition, this reform would enhance local spending autonomy, preserving the information advantages of provincial and local governments. So, vertical sharing would become relatively simple. Of the total amount of revenue raised (on taxes where the central government had responsibility for setting the tax rate), 73 percent would be transferred to the subnational governments on an unconditional basis. That would make the vertical sharing revenue neutral. The central government would have the discretion to adjust the general sharing rate up or down, depending on factors such as the need to protect the expenditure-revenue balance, the costs of urbanization, compensation for expenditure reassignments, and the like. The horizontal sharing regime, the distribution of a provincial revenue sharing pool, could be based fully on a formula, rather than on the origin of collections as under the current system, or on several formulas and ad hoc distributions as in the case of unconditional grants. Such a horizontal sharing approach would force local governments to compete for tax revenue based on the provision of quality public services, rather than by

using subsidies to attract industry and thus build its tax base. This approach would offer a better possibility for equalization and for the reduction of fiscal disparities. And it also would encourage cities to develop based on their own advantages, because the revenues of a city would be neutral to any particular economic structure irrespective of whether it was a port city, an industrial city, or a city with a significant presence of non-taxed public activities. The formula should reflect the objectives of the government, and will change how the grant pool is distributed among provinces. The formula would be defined by the choice of the variables and how they are weighed. With emphasis on equalization, the provincial population might be weighed heavily in the formula (as is done in Germany). If the goal is to provide more funding where expenditure needs are greatest, the formula elements would concentrate on measures reflecting the cost of providing a minimum service level. China can build on its own practice with formula distribution of the equalization grant but also can learn from international experience. Formula grant systems are used in many developed countries; Australia, for example, manages a sophisticated system. In contrast, some countries, such as the United States, have no system of equalization among the states and instead rely on federal earmarked grants and state government policies to provide equalization. As a result, standards of service delivery can vary considerably from state to state and from local government to local government. Box 6.4 lists the approaches to formula grants applied in other countries. In the case of China, this formula grant should ensure that local government has capacity to deliver the minimum public service package to all serviced population, which would give explicit entitlement to migrants to access the basic public service package wherever they choose to work. The conditional transfer system should ensure local government capacity to address externalities and to more directly address high-poverty provinces. The current conditional transfer system could be simplified. China could consider consolidating many specific grants into a limited number of sec-

405


406

URBAN CHINA

BOX 6.4

Formula grants

Formula grants refer to methods of distributing revenue entitlements according to an objective set of indicators. This approach has appeal because it can be objective and, depending on how it is constructed, can seem fair, for example, a formula with a province’s served population and/or per capita income as a key indicator. It also has the advantage to keep the grant share of each local government relatively stable, as a province’s share of national population or relative level of per capita income are unlikely to change quickly. Formula grant transfers also have some undesirable features, however. While the formula itself is objective once it is determined, the process of making the determination is less so—it requires a great deal of judgment and is susceptible to favoritism. Moreover, the choice of variables to be used in the formula may be restricted by the quality of the data available. Many approaches can be taken to constructing a formula. The great variation in the practice might be summarized under four relatively common grant categories. The first might be called the “standard needsstandard revenue gap.” The idea here is to set the amount of grants for each local government according to the gap between the amount of expenditures required to deliver a minimum level of services and the amount of local revenue that could be raised at a “normal” level of effort. Many consider this approach to be the best. It was developed in Australia and is

also used in Italy and the Republic of Korea, as well as in China. The second approach is more ad hoc, in that it develops a formula based on impressionistic reasoning about indicators of fiscal capacity and expenditure needs, and then weights each indicator in the distribution formula. These can be very complicated or very simple. Most commonly, population is used as the basic measure of expenditure needs, although its weight in the formula may differ from country to country (for example, 75 percent in Spain and 10 percent in India). Other indicators of expenditure need are also chosen in different countries, such as the percent who are elderly in Korea, population density in Germany, energy cost in Mongolia, and that share of the population with no access to health care in South Africa. Third, some provision is made for fiscal capacity. For example, less revenue is transferred to places with greater fi scal capacity and more to places with less capacity (Switzerland, Germany, and India). Alternatively, more revenue may be transferred to places that make a greater tax effort (Spain). Finally formal set-asides are provided in some cases where the government feels that a factor that cannot be measured is nonetheless important to include; examples are state capitals in Brazil and “backward” states in India.

Source: Bahl and Qiao 2013.

toral block grants that would need to be linked to central government’s broad sectoral objectives and supported by a system of performance indicators and performance review. All conditional grant programs should be subject to a sunset clause and a regular formal review, say every five years. That implies that grant financing would be stable and predictable for five years and that formula revision could take place only as a result of a formal review after five years. To overcome delay in disbursement of funds, recipient governments would receive a regular disbursement, say every month, of a specific amount, say 90 percent of the estimated grant due, with the balance disbursed upon evidence of performance. To overcome any diversion of funds by pass-through intermediary govern-

ments, all allocations could be posted on the web before the start of the fiscal year. Subprovincial finance would need to be reformed to ensure resources get to where they are needed. Adjustments in central-provincial fiscal relations alone are not sufficient to ensure that adequate resources would be available to accommodate the budgetary impacts of urbanization. In fact, intraprovincial inequalities in fiscal resources are likely greater than interprovincial disparities. Subprovincial revenue sharing arrangements vary widely from province to province with few mandatory controls set in place by the central government—a feature that is usually observed in federal countries but not in unitary ones. Imposition of mandates by the central government on the pass-through of


FINANCING URBANIZATION

central transfers to city and county governments may be prudent to ensure objectives can be achieved.

Reform land finance The Chinese practice of financing urban infrastructure with the proceeds of land leases is both wildly successful and problematic. The basic problem is not with the practice of converting farmland assets into productive urban facilities and higher-quality urban services, but rather with the way in which it is being done. Land fi nance reform needs to address three key challenges: realigning the subnational governments’ incentives regarding land acquisition and development with residents’ interest; getting the best economic value from the land assets the subnational governments have already acquired; and mitigating the fiscal risks emanating from land market volatility. 21 This reform would call for China to change the way land development is financed; explore other options for capturing land value and value increase; and establish rigorous fiscal rules for land fi nancing. These would require important changes in the law and the administration, and these changes would need to be worked out and fit together. The following are the most difficult issues: • Fairness: The fairness questions related to expropriation and compensation for farmland and village construction land must be worked out. If compensation for these lands is set at market levels for urban land, then a capital gains tax should be levied and returned to local governments. That would put government in the right place— taxing the profits at a reasonable rate rather than expropriating all of the profits. • Urban sprawl: The problem of dealing with urban sprawl is related to the practice of selling land leases. At least at the margin, this problem might be addressed with a property tax that would help rationalize the land market by imposing a holding cost on land in the built-up area that is being held off the market, imposing higher motor vehicle and motor fuel taxes that would increase the cost of city sprawling, and eliminating derivation-based revenue

sharing, which would reduce the incentive for local government leaders to subsidize industry. • Revenue impact. The net impact on fi nancing of these changes in land leasing is uncertain and depends on the stock of the idle industrial land and other public land. The first change will inevitably lower the net profits of governments from land, while the second change, abolishing subsidies on industrial land, would reduce tax expenditures and therefore improve revenues. In addition, the land saved through more efficient use of industrial land could be reallocated to housing or commercial use, and that is likely to generate a significant amount of revenue. To mitigate any possible revenue shortfall, China could impose betterment taxes on those that see the value of their property rise because of infrastructure development. Box 6.5 lists several practices for capturing land value that have been applied in other countries. This reform would have important impacts, and the debate surrounding it would be politically charged. Whether its adoption is in the best interests of China depends on how well the reform matches national goals. On the one hand, infrastructure services no longer would be free to users, industries would be deprived of some profits, and city governments might no longer enjoy the monopoly power over land transactions. On the other hand, this reform could reduce the incentives that lead to urban sprawl, improve equity, and optimize the use of existing urban land. A slowdown in land leasing and infrastructure spending could give more space for attention to maintenance and a reallocation of public expenditures to social services. In addition, this reform would encourage more efficient use of industrial land and promote more efficient allocation of industries based on market prices for land. That might narrow regional disparity because the less developed regions with cheaper land have more opportunity to attract industrial investment. Urban-rural income disparity could be narrowed as well. Farmers in city suburbs would gain directly from land conversion, and those living far away from urban areas could also

407


408

URBAN CHINA

BOX 6.5

Options for policies and tools that capture land value

Value capture allows government to capture at least part of the increase in land value emanating from better infrastructure services, and use these funds to subsidize the infrastructure investment. A prerequisite is that the infrastructure services must generate sufficient value to be captured. China has been successful in capturing increments in land value, but the key challenge is to set a rule to allow all people to share the development outcomes as well as the risks. The rule should be economically justifi able, incentive compatible and acceptable to the public. There are a number of value capture instruments and other financial mechanisms being applied across the United States, Europe and Asia (Smolka and Amborski 2007; Peterson 2008). The most prevalent and effective of these include: Special assessment districts. New and special levies on properties that will benefit from the provision of new or upgraded public transit (Examples in the United States are 17 percent of the fi rst phase of the Portland streetcar system, 50 percent of the capital costs of South Lake Union streetcar system in Seattle, and 28 percent of the cost of the new New York Avenue Metrorail station in Washington, DC). This approach involves creating new revenues as a result of an alteration to local taxation or levy settings. Tax increment financing. This approach dedicates future tax increments within a certain defined district

to finance debt issued to pay for a project, which theoretically will create the conditions for future gains (used primarily in U.S. cities). Transit-oriented development or joint development. Given that transit infrastructure plays a critical role in the end value of development projects, the capture of profits from activities associated with real estate development in and around transit stations may allow a transit agency to deliver an operating ratio in excess of 100 percent (as in the case of Hong Kong SAR, China’s MTRC). The approach that MTRC uses is described as the “Rail + Property model.” Joint development, similarly, can be described as a real estate development project that involves coordination between multiple parties to develop sites near transit, usually on publically owned land (examples are the Land Transport Authority and SMRT in Singapore, BART in San Francisco Bay Area, and the Transport for London Crossrail project). Developer charges or development impact fees. The use of charges that defray the cost of expanding and extending public services in a particular area. For example, in Broward County, Florida, the local government implemented a transit-oriented concurrency system. Developer charges or impact fees are specifically targeted to fund the transit infrastructure required within the location of development from which the fee or charge is levied.

gain if they are allowed to convert their construction land to agriculture land and sell land conversion rights in the market, as is the case in Chengdu. Under this new regime, government’s exposure to property prices would be reduced but would not disappear. The sheer size of land financing for infrastructure points to the importance of setting rules for land fi nancing. Fiscal rules would allow prudent management of land financing while ensuring that it continues to play an important role in financing urbanization. Internationally, there are no standard full-fledged regulatory rules, but an analogy can be drawn with the regulatory rules for debt fi nancing. (Peterson and Kaganova 2010) More specifically, China could consider the following regulatory rules. First, the priority would be establishment of uniform reporting requirements for sub-

national land ownership, land sales, contributions of land to public-private ventures, land transactions between different types of subnational institutions, and revenue generated by land sales. These are the essential building blocks needed to translate priority principles into meaningful fiscal oversight. China has taken the fi rst important step by requiring that land transactions be placed “on budget,” so that there is full upward reporting to higher-level authorities. A natural next step would be an inventory of municipally owned land and land owned by different elements and subsidiaries of government, which is basic to asset size and land management options. Similar to loan guarantees, the risks include transfer of land to or from third parties in nontransparent ways that may entangle financial relations between a municipality and its subsidiaries. All information on public


FINANCING URBANIZATION

land inventories, public land valuations, land sales, and land contributions to public-private joint ventures or subsidiaries should be conducted through standardized instruments, be reflected in the budget or its annexes and financial statements, and be a matter of public record. Regulations typically identify what types of publicly owned property can and cannot be alienated, either by sale or as collateral for loans. The registration of land and property collateral for land-management purposes also involves exactly the same information required for subnational debt regulation. Second, the “golden rule” of public finance should be applied to subnational land fi nancing: Proceeds of land asset sales must be used only to fi nance investment. Exceptions could be allowed for key, one-time institutional reforms. Although urban authorities can acquire new land at the urban fringe, and under certain conditions may acquire land through condemnation or eminent domain, urban land cannot be “produced” indefinitely. Sale or leasing of public land is not a “recurring” source of revenue. Thus, revenues from the sale or other disposition of public land should be treated as one-time revenues, with proceeds used to fi nance urban investment or finance other one-time expenditures such as major institutional reforms. Such rules also open the opportunity to diversify and augment own-source financing of capital investment. Recurring revenues from public land development may be appropriately allocated to subnational operating budgets. In cases where public authorities develop commercial or industrial projects on public land, for example, development costs can be recaptured through annual rental charges and used to finance debt service charges through the operating budget. For economic efficiency and fiscal prudence, it is essential in these cases that all parts of a public development project, including land, be valued at market prices, and that the decision whether to publicly develop a site, sell land to the private sector for private development, or hold land in the public domain for future development and future increases in land value be made taking into account realistic market valuations.

Third, loans and bonds backed by land collateral may require special regulation. Urban land markets are volatile and cyclical. Extreme dependence on land finance for capital investment funding will impart this volatility to subnational capital budgets. The fiscal framework should mitigate such risk. Risk mitigation may take the form of ceilings on land-fi nance dependence (similar to ceilings on local indebtedness) or establishment of permanent infrastructure funds that accumulate proceeds from land sales and spread out expenditures over time, according to an infrastructure investment plan. Such rules could set minimum collateral to loan ratios for land-backed loans and prescribe that land must be valued at current market value for collateral purposes. Fourth, transfer of surplus land to other government units or enterprises, private developers, or public-private partnerships should be prohibited except on a fully disclosed contract basis. Establishing a land trust (found in some U.S. states) that could receive land sale proceeds, and ensuring that proceeds are used for infrastructure investment as prescribed by law, or as decided by appropriate authority with a metropolitanwide perspective, is one way to overcome the incentives that bureaucratic owners have to “internalize” land sale gains for the sole benefit of the agency.

Develop stable and sustainable debt finance Stable and sustainable debt finance is critical to China’s continuing urbanization. A consensus has emerged within China that local governments should be allowed to access financial markets directly. Direct access yields several benefits. Subnational borrowing finances infrastructure more equitably because it matches infrastructure asset life with the maturity of debt instrument so that the beneficiaries of the financed services pay for them. It also exposes local governments to market disciplines and reporting requirements, hence helping strengthen fiscal transparency, sound budget and financial management, and good governance. Furthermore, expanding local government borrowing

409


410

URBAN CHINA

facilitates the development of competitive fi nancial markets, in particular the deepening of the bond market. And finally, regulated direct access to borrowing rather than unregulated indirect access through LGFVs is likely to entail lower risks for the financial sector. Before China modifies the Budget Law to allow local governments to have direct and open access to credit, a regulatory framework must be established in line with international good practice. Even in the United States, the legal framework set up by each state regulates the borrowing of the state and its local governments (Canuto and Liu 2013). These regulatory frameworks work together with markets to discipline subnational borrowing and make it sustainable. China’s capital markets are still evolving; thus it is all the more important to establish a framework to regulate subnational borrowing while promoting a competitive and diversified subnational credit market.

Rigorous regulatory frameworks for subnational borrowers As China develops a regulatory framework for subnational borrowers, international experience is relevant. The 1990s saw widespread subnational debt crises or fiscal stress in major developing countries such as Argentina, Brazil, India, Mexico, and the Russian Federation. These crises led to reforms to develop and strengthen regulatory frameworks for local government debt financing in these countries. Some countries such as Peru established a framework in the early 2000s to preempt the fiscal risks of decentralization. Historically, the debt crises in U.S. states in the 1840s led to major constitutional reforms regulating debt in many states. In France, a regulatory framework was put in place in the 1990s after episodes of insolvency in the early 1990s as a result of uncontrolled local government borrowing in the 1980s (L. Liu and Waibel 2010). Following international experiences, the basic structure of a regulatory framework for China in the medium term should consider the following elements: identifying which entities are eligible for borrowing, reforming

LGFVs, setting fiscal rules and debt limits, and developing approval and monitoring procedures for debt issuance. Eligibility of borrowing entities. A key question is which level of subnational governments should be allowed to borrow and whether LGFVs should continue to serve as financing platform of subnational governments. To answer this question, it is important to note that debt is intended to finance long-term asset formation and that it must be serviced. A subnational government that has revenue sources and a responsibility to finance infrastructure should be allowed to access financial markets. If and when a subnational government is legally permitted to borrow, the practice for creating LGFVs as pure financing vehicles should cease. However, LGFVs that fi nance and manage essential infrastructure services such as roads, water supply and solid waste treatment should be permitted to borrow, if these LGFVs have their own sources of revenues generated from infrastructure projects. These LGFVs will follow corporate governance structure and financial reporting requirements. These two types of borrowing entities— subnational government and LGFVs—are differentiated by the underlying sources of revenues to service the debt. A subnational government as a borrower will have broader revenue sources such as transfers and tax revenues to service the debt. LGFVs in infrastructure generate revenues from user fees such as tolls and water fees that can be used to service the debt. While fiscally strong local governments can access markets, fiscally weaker local governments, particularly in rural or economically disadvantaged regions, may have difficulty in achieving creditworthiness. For these local governments, the central or provincial government needs to fi nance the bare minimum of infrastructure investment through grants or direct construction by the higherlevel government. To prevent local governments from not seeking to become creditworthy in order to access grant financing, the amount of funding provided should be determined by standardized rules to ensure a set of minimum standards of service delivery.


FINANCING URBANIZATION

Local governments with fiscal potential but lagging in achieving creditworthiness should also be eligible only for rule-based small grants for infrastructure until they can demonstrate creditworthiness. Policy banks should focus on assisting these local governments with technical assistance and training in return for making the first new loan to the local government only after it passes the creditworthiness threshold. Reforming LGFVs. Even after local governments are allowed to borrow directly, some LGFVs can still play an important role in infrastructure financing and operations. The reforms should differentiate three types of LGFVs. LGFVs that fi nance and implement public infrastructure projects should continue to exist but be reformed to become transparent and financially stronger. LGFVs that are pure fi nancing vehicles for subnational governments should be dissolved, and their debts brought onto local government balance sheet, once the subnational governments have formal and open access to markets (after the Budget Law is amended). LGFVs that mix public and private commercial activities should divest their commercial activities, in line with the direction of refocusing the government on essential public services. This last is perhaps the most challenging aspect of LGFV reform. As the three types of LGFVs are being classified and restructured, an important reform is to consolidate and restructure LGFV debt (see section on insolvency framework). After restructuring and consolidation, LGFVs that will continue to fi nance and manage public investments can be strengthened in three ways. First, if they are not already, these LGFVs should be corporatized, which would strengthen their corporate governance and financial structure. China should continue reforms on cost recovery and pricing of tariffs, which will be critical to the financial sustainability of infrastructure. Second, the fiscal relationship between the government budget and LGFV operations should become transparent. LGFVs should follow internationally acceptable accounting and reporting standards, and have their

accounts audited and their financial statements disclosed periodically to the local people’s congress and the public. Some LGFVs that engage in infrastructure projects may not be financially self-sufficient and may continue to require budgetary support. In these cases, their financial statements should become part of the government budget documents and be reported to the appropriate people’s congress and disclosed to the public. LGFVs that rely on budget support should also be part of the capital budgeting process and of the general government borrowing plan, as is done in Maryland in the United States, for example. Third, fi nancially self-sustaining LGFVs should be allowed to access markets through their own financial strength but they should also follow a rigorous regulatory framework. LGFVs that generate project revenues such as tolls and water fees should be able to use revenue bonds instruments or project fi nancing to access financial markets for infrastructure investments. Fiscal rules and debt limits for borrowing. Fiscal rules and debt limits for borrowers are intended to manage the risks of systemic defaults before they occur. Many countries have adopted a basic rule, called the “golden rule,” which allows government entities to borrow money only for long-term public capital investments (L. Liu and Waibel 2010). Based on international practice, short-term borrowing for working capital can be permitted. However, provisions should be established to provide a maximum amount of such short-term borrowing and to prevent the rollover of short-term borrowing into operating deficits. In addition to the golden rule, a further set of fiscal rules and debt limits should be established. A number of issues must be considered in establishing such rules and limits (L. Liu and Pradelli 2013). First, fiscal rules and debt indicators for subnational governments must take into account the fiscal space available for the total public sector, that is, central and local governments. For any given resources available to repay the total public debt, the borrowing space is ultimately split between the central and local governments. At high debt levels, public indebtedness tends

411


412

URBAN CHINA

to hamper economic growth by crowding out private investment (because of higher interest rates, debt overhang problems, and the like) and imposing heavy tax burdens that distort incentives to produce and invest. In China, the low level of sovereign debt provides comfortable space for subnational debt accumulation. However, local government borrowing limits should be established in tandem with public finance reform that aligns the tax revenues with functions and gives local government the taxing power to meet local needs. In addition, potential expenditure pressures that could constrain fiscal space for subnational entities should be carefully monitored. Second, translating thresholds established by empirical studies into debt limits guiding borrowing policies can be challenging. China differs critically from some other developing countries. While excessive indebtedness of subnational governments has led to restrictive debt limits in other countries, China may not benefit from overly restrictive debt limits that can hamper growth. Faster economic growth, large national savings, and a lower cost of borrowing can lead to positive debt dynamics in China. The main goal in China is to develop sound regulatory frameworks so that subnational governments can mobilize resources from the capital markets to finance large-scale infrastructure investments that support growth and urbanization, while containing overall macroeconomic risks. Third, it will be important to establish fiscal rules for LGFVs as well, because LGFVs’ liabilities ultimately constitute sources of contingent liabilities for central and local governments. In the United States, SPV borrowing is subject to regulation (L. Liu 2010). For example, a typical rate covenant in the United States for a water-sewer utility is to set rates sufficient to produce net revenues equal to at least 1.25 times total annual debt service. In the United States, SPV debt financed by revenue bonds is subject to the regulatory rules and debt limits set for revenue bonds but is generally outside the debt limits imposed on debt instruments securitized by a government’s general taxation power. For this to work, accounting and financial transparency of SPVs is an important prerequisite.

Without transparency, the financial problems of an SPV can become contingent liabilities of its owner. Table 6.5 provides a summary of key fiscal rules and debt limits for China to consider. Guarantees can play a useful role in bridging financing for projects that have public policy justifications, or where markets do not fully recognize the underlying economic values. However, guarantees also create an incentive for risky borrowers to seek government guarantees, and for interrelated public entities to support one another in ways that violate arm’s-length standards and obfuscate the financial risks that are being assumed. International experience shows that the risks of guarantees for debt service can be regulated while retaining the usefulness of the guarantees. The generally applied key rules include the following (L. Liu 2010): • Private companies may be prohibited from getting such guarantees. • The scope of guarantees for municipal enterprises may be limited. In France, for example, annual debt charges paid by the local government on its own loans and on loans it has guaranteed may not exceed 50 percent of its operating revenue; no single borrower may receive in guarantees more than 5 percent of the local government’s operating revenue, and guarantees may not exceed 50 percent of the principal of the debt of the entity that is guaranteed. Poland has a stricter rule, which counts guarantees provided to a municipal enterprise by a local government as part of the government debt service, which in total (principal, interest, and guaranteed debt service) cannot exceed 15 percent of its revenues. • Guarantees and all other direct and indirect debt liabilities should be an explicit part of local government budget and financial statements, fully disclosed to the local people’s congress and the public. Procedures for approving and monitoring subnational debt. The central government, through the Ministry of Finance, should set fiscal rules and debt limits for all levels of subnational government. These rules and


FINANCING URBANIZATION

413

TABLE 6.5 Proposed fiscal rule and debt limit indicators Indicators

Total SNG debt-to-GDP ratio

Objective and application

To monitor aggregate debt of all subnational entities. To ensure the division of debt space between the central gov’t and SNGs and the limits on the overall public debt

Comments

The ratio applying to individual local government misses the heterogeneity—the cost of borrowing depends on local government’s own solvency and risk, and local government with low risk of insolvency can service larger stock of debt than local government with high risk of insolvency. Individual local government’s debt-to-GSDP ratio, where GSDP is the local GDP, is not advisable because GSDP and local government revenue capacity might not be correlated.

Debt service-to-own revenue ratio

To apply uniformly to each individual subnational government general budget, to ensure financial capacity to service debt and provide incentives for own revenue collection

The ratio reflects local government’s repayment capacity (denominator) for servicing debt (numerator). Arrears should be included into the ratio. The denominator needs to reflect local government revenue capacity. Important considerations: own revenue vs non-own-revenue (transfers), regular flow of revenues vs one-off revenues (asset sales, land leasing).

“Golden rule”

To apply to both SPVs and SNGs general budgets

Imposed on the general budget if SNG retains responsibility for certain capital expenditures beyond those transferred to LGFVs. Imposed also on LGFVs. Important to have a sound framework for public investment project appraisal (including costbenefit analysis) and transparent accounting (to avoid creative accounting as well as misclassifications between current and capital spending).

Infrastructure sectorspecific debt-to-revenue ratio

To apply to financially viable LGFVs

Applied to financially viable LGFVs. Preferably revenue net of operating expenditures. Requiring operations to be sufficiently profitable in cash terms to repay SPVs debt obligations. The industrial sector-specific norms observed in the United States could provide a basic guideline for helping develop Chinaspecific norms.

Source: Liu and Pradelli 2013. Note: GDP = gross domestic product; GSDP = gross state domestic product; LGFV = local government financing vehicle; SNG = subnational government; SPV = special purpose vehicle.

limits should be monitored on a regular basis. Local governments should have autonomy to issue debts within the limits, but a debt issuance plan for each level of government should be submitted to the corresponding people’s congress for approval along with its annual budget plan. The debt issuance plan should be disclosed to the public. Key fiscal and debt indicators should be disclosed on a quarterly basis, and these indicators should be standardized across local governments for benchmarking and monitoring. A chief fi nancial officer (CFO) can be established at the subnational government level. Centralizing the accountability for local government finance in one office would clarify authority on financial management matters and would put a halt to the decentralized and uncoordinated issuance of local government debt.

Ideally, this officer should come from the department that manages the public purse or its supervisor (mayor). Each level of government should set up a budget committee consisting of the budget department, the local Development Research Center, the Land Department, and the CFO and charge it with making a coordinated decision on the size of government expenditure, revenue and cash flow projections, and deficits and debt fi nancing. The budget committee should be chaired by the provincial governor or mayor, or their designated executive governor or mayor. A debt management committee (chaired by the CFO) and consisting of representatives of key departments such as the treasury, budget, and land departments and the local Development Research Center, should make a coordinated


414

URBAN CHINA

decision on a medium-term debt strategy, by taking into account the revenue streams, cash flow, procurement and expenditure plans of line departments, and the balance sheet of governments (assets and liabilities). Gradually, China should move toward a robust borrowing framework that connects with the overall framework of fiscal management and transparency.

Developing an insolvency framework International experience shows that relying only on ex ante fiscal rules and limits, without ex post consequences, gives irresponsible borrowers and lenders an incentive to get around the ex ante rules and execute transactions that will later get bailed out (L. Liu 2010). China would need to establish a framework for insolvency and debt restructuring, in addition to ex ante borrowing framework discussed above. International experience shows that a collective framework for debt resolution is at the core of a sound insolvency framework (L. Liu 2010; L. Liu and Waibel 2010). The tension between maintaining essential services and creditors’ contractual rights implies that the pain of insolvency needs to be shared between creditors and the debtor. The insolvency mechanism needs to balance these competing interests and guide the priority structure for settling competing claims. A collective framework will take on more importance as the subnational bond market develops and grows to include thousands of creditors. A lack of clear rules for insolvency is likely to raise borrowing costs, and may limit market access for creditworthy borrowers. In the United States, Chapter 9 of the Bankruptcy Code imposes strong measures on defaulting municipalities and carries a strong stigma to offset debtor moral hazard. A sound framework should reduce the moral hazard of subnational defaults, discourage free riders, bind all local governments to pursue sustainable fiscal policies, and extend the short-term horizon of local governments to minimize the impact of unsustainable fiscal policy on future generations (Canuto and Liu 2013). In the absence of a clearly defined framework for insolvency,

local governments may adjust debt in negotiations with creditors, repudiate their obligations, or shift the liabilities to higher levels of government. A country’s legal, political, and historical context influences the choice and design of an insolvency system. However, a sound insolvency system balances the needs of borrowers (representing citizens) and the needs of creditors (representing savers), establishes a transparent and rule-based debt workout procedure, and minimizes moral hazard. Such a framework in China will serve two purposes. First, it will guide the restructuring of subnational debt. China currently is conducting a comprehensive audit of subnational debt. As the reform of LGFVs and other off-budget vehicles (such as financing vehicles for hospitals and universities) proceeds, the debt of the off-budget vehicles will need to be classified, and some may need to be restructured. Second, an insolvency framework will address future defaults of subnational units so that an insolvent local government can maintain essential services while restructuring its debts, restore its financial health, and reenter the financial market.

Developing a subnational credit market China has large national savings. It also has large infrastructure demand resulting from rapid urbanization and the need to absorb millions of rural residents in urban areas. Financial markets can channel savings into infrastructure investments. Diversified subnational credit markets can provide more investment instruments for institutions (such as insurance companies and mutual funds) and individual investors. Two models of subnational credit markets. There are two major models of subnational credit markets: bank lending, which financed municipal investment in Western Europe throughout most of the 20th century and is still the primary source of local credit financing there, and subnational bond markets, which China has been developing as an additional source to bank lending. The United States is an example of a country that has a deep and competitive municipal bond market. Annual issuances of local govern-


FINANCING URBANIZATION

ment bonds are about $400 billion with outstanding liabilities at about $3 trillion (or 20 percent of GDP). Individual investors are the largest holders of U.S. subnational bonds, followed by mutual funds, bank trust accounts, banks, insurance companies, and corporations (L. Liu 2010). Developing competitive and diversified funding sources for infrastructure fi nancing is important to help lower the financing cost. In establishing a framework for municipal finance borrowing after the fall of apartheid, South Africa clearly understood the benefits of competition in the subnational credit market. Its Intergovernmental Fiscal Review report states, “Active capital markets, with a variety of buyers and sellers, and a variety of financial products, can offer more efficiency than direct lending. First, competition for municipal debt instruments tends to keep borrowing costs down and create structural options for every need. Second, an active market implies liquidity for an investor who may wish to sell. Liquidity reduces risk, increases the pool of potential investors, and thus improves efficiency” (South Africa National Treasury 2001, 192). Several European countries, including the Netherlands and Sweden, and over 50 developing countries have set up municipal development banks or municipal development funds as the sole or main channel for providing credit to subnational governments. That approach is not recommended for China. Municipal development banks and funds appear to have the advantage of a focused purpose and scope and an ability to build relationships with their borrowers. In theory, they are able to more closely monitor the borrower and provide technical assistance to weaker borrowers. If not well regulated, however, such close relationships with borrowers can be problematic, and the limited scope of their business increases the risk of failure in the case of widespread default. Most importantly, their subsidized lending is costly to the central government and impedes the development of market-based financing. The international experience with specialized national and regional development banks and municipal funds is mixed with negative examples and consequences. Bra-

zil privatized almost all state policy banks as part of a debt restructuring agreement between those banks and the federal government in 1997. In the Philippines, government financial institutions have become an impediment to private entry into local government markets. In some Eastern Europe countries, municipal funds have become monopolies. According to Peterson (2003), financial sector deregulation has eliminated the possibility of having quasi-monopoly municipal banks draw on specially protected government allocations of low-cost, long-term savings to finance subnational infrastructure. In a competitive world, bonds offer more ways to tap institutional and household longterm savings. Even when the ultimate credit extended to a local government continues to be a loan from a bank or other fi nancial institution, the financial intermediary will increasingly raise its own capital for lending from bond issues. Developing a subnational bond market. China’s infrastructure financing has been dominated by commercial banks and government policy banks (and land fi nancing). This dominance provides too narrow a set of financing instruments for China’s continuing urbanization. By broadening the range of instruments and sources to include institutional investors in the domestic bond market, and eventually even private equity, financing can better respond to the pace and scale of infrastructure development that China’s rapid urbanization requires. Engaging the domestic bond market in urban infrastructure financing creates a new class of assets for Chinese investors. Institutional investors have large resources to invest in the domestic debt market. These resources can be put to work financing urban infrastructure. Bonds issued by local governments and LGFVs are well suited to the needs of institutional investors such as pension funds, insurance companies, and mutual funds for wealthy individuals who wish to diversify their investments in long-term assets. Bonds that finance urban infrastructure can provide a secure source of fi xed income for institutional investors. They can also be risk rated so that regulatory authorities can assess the

415


416

URBAN CHINA

impact that they have on the riskiness of the institutional investors’ portfolio, and institutional investors can be limited to investments in highly rated assets, as they are in many countries. There is substantial room to grow and deepen the bond market to achieve a longterm investment target of 150–200 percent of GDP. In 2010, China’s domestic bond market was 40 percent of GDP. In Turkey, it is over 90 percent, and in Brazil nearly 200 percent (IFC 2013). Deep, efficient domestic capital markets are a powerful source of long-term financing for infrastructure and other sectors that underpin growth. They create alternative financing tools and greater access to capital. Domestic capital markets also provide resilience against banking system shocks. China has already started to experiment with creating a municipal bond market (table 6.6). Since 2011, four local governments—the provinces of Guangdong and Zhejiang and the cities of Shanghai and Shenzhen—have been allowed to issue a small amount of municipal bonds directly in the market. In 2013, the provinces of Jiangsu and Shandong were added to the trial program. A much larger volume of financing has also been mobilized for provincial governments through bonds issued by the Ministry of Finance on behalf of the provincial governments. To better take advantage of the bond market, China will need to extend the yield curve. Three- and five-year bonds, which constitute 98 percent of municipal bonds issued in China since 2011, are too short to spread debt service over the life of the infrastructure. Front-loading the debt service in this way puts unnecessary strain on local TABLE 6.6 Local government bonds by issuers RMB, 100 millions

Ministry of Finance Shanghai Guangdong Shenzhen Zhejiang Total Source: Painter 2013.

2009

2010

2011

2012

Total

2,000 0 0 0 0 2,000

2,000 0 0 0 0 2,000

1,771 71 69 22 67 2,000

2,211 89 86 27 87 2,500

5,982 160 155 49 154 6,500

government fi nances and creditworthiness. China should encourage the issuance of municipal bonds with terms of 10, 15, and 20 years with the objective of moving to 25- and 30-year bonds over time. To extend the term of municipal bonds, the market will have to establish a yield curve that prices bonds of equal quality according to their term. This requires benchmark rates for those terms in the sovereign bond market. Central government AAA Treasury bonds have been issued for 10- and 20-year terms, but the volume has been relatively small, so benchmark rates have yet to become firm. The Ministry of Finance could begin issuing 15-year T-bonds and increase the volume of longer-term issues to establish benchmarks in the rates for riskfree long bonds. The local government bond market could be promoted by clearly defining types of revenues that can securitize the bonds. Two types of revenues facilitate the development of two types of bonds: general obligations bonds and revenue bonds. General obligation bonds (GBs) are secured by a government’s general faith and credit, that is, the general taxation revenue of the issuer. This type of bond provides a useful financing instrument for public services, such as local streets, street lights, and traffic signals, which do not generate revenues or sufficient revenues, from user charges. The ratings of general obligation bonds are the same as the institutional rating of the issuer unless specific credit enhancements (for example, a bond guaranty from a policy bank or other source) are added to the bond. Revenue bonds (RBs) are secured solely by the revenues generated from the project financed by the bonds. There is a direct link between the beneficiaries of the project and their obligations to pay debt services. Investors have no claim on other local government revenue sources for repayment of these bonds. For this reason, RBs are suited only for fi nancing projects that can produce revenue from user charges, such as projects for water supply, toll roads, airports, and public transport. Revenue bonds reinforce selfsustaining finance, because the repayment of principal and interest is made entirely from the revenues generated from the project financed by the bonds. These bonds allow


FINANCING URBANIZATION

the market to play a central role in enforcing debt limitation, pricing risks, and matching the maturities of liabilities with the economic lives of assets. More importantly, RBs affirm that sustainability is about the ability of the borrower to service the debt. No financing structure has been of greater importance to the growth of the U.S. municipal bond market than RBs, which account for about two-thirds of subnational debt in the United States (L. Liu and Waibel 2008). In the United States, revenues bonds of SPVs are outside the debt limits set by the states, but revenue bonds follow strict rules and have a low rate of debt default. Hybrid bonds (HBs) are a third type of municipal bond that combines characteristics of both general obligation and revenue bonds. Like a GB, debt service payments are not linked to revenues produced by the project being financed. Like an RB, the local government does not have to pledge the use of all of its revenue sources to debt service. Hybrid bonds offer investors repayment from one or more specific revenue sources only. Local governments can pledge a highly reliable source of revenue to the HB and arrange for that revenue to be directed into a trust account dedicated solely to repayment of the HB. This allows local governments to finance projects that do not produce revenue with a reliable alternative revenue source, while not encumbering their overall balance sheet. Carefully structured HBs can achieve bond ratings that are better than the issuer’s institutional credit rating. Compared to GBs and RBs, HBs have proven to be the preferred type of infrastructure bonds in the emerging debt markets of India, Mexico, South Africa, and elsewhere. Local governments in general should refrain from speculative debt instruments such as structured products. These instruments should be regulated and in most cases prohibited for used by local governments. The risky debt profiles of some local governments in France stemming from the use of structured products in the 2000s provide a cautionary tale (Canuto and Liu 2013). Regulating the subnational credit market. Development of a subnational bond market

requires a coherent set of securities regulations. In many ways, securities regulations for subnational bonds are similar to those for sovereign and corporate bonds. The institutional infrastructure for bond issuance and trading, such as regulations on credit rating agencies, broker-dealers, underwriters, and auditors, are also similar. In addition, China also needs to build a reliable government bond market yield curve, standardize the accounting standards of public sectors, impose municipal bond documentation and disclosure requirements, and develop professional services. Security laws cannot prevent defaults and financial deterioration of local governments. Securities laws also cannot replace rules for prudent fiscal management of local governments and for corporate governance for public entities and special purpose vehicles that are owned by local governments. What they can do is mandate disclosure to investors of all material information that would affect an investor’s decision to buy, sell, or hold a security. Securities regulations may also cover the offer and sales of securities and the regulation of issuers, trading systems, and the professionals who work in these areas (box 6.6). The introduction of an insolvency framework that disciplines both lenders and borrowers, together with a law that makes financing offered to unrated local governments unenforceable, creates strong incentives for more responsible financing of urban infrastructure. Vigilant regulation of banks and institutional investors creates an important incentive for prudent lending behavior. Putting regulation of all financial institutions on an equal footing will open the door to greater use of long-term financing in the Chinese capital market. Over the long term, the development of subnational credit markets would also benefit from self-regulation and a “buyer beware” approach. Many U.S. regulations were developed by the market players themselves or through market practice. For example, the Government Finance Officers Association developed many municipal bond disclosure rules and practices that were adopted in the industry. The U.S. market has also benefited from 200 years of operation, during which

417


418

URBAN CHINA

BOX 6.6

U.S. securities laws applicable to municipal securities

Securities laws • The Securities Act of 1933 established a regulatory scheme for offerings of corporate securities but exempted offerings of municipal securities. It also included the first antifraud provision, which applies to both corporate and municipal securities.a • The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 established the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to enforce civil antifraud laws and regulate brokers, dealers, and certain other market organizations and professionals. Like the Securities Act of 1933, its antifraud provisions apply to all securities, including municipal securities. • There are also criminal securities fraud laws, enforced by the U.S. Department of Justice, private securities litigation, and enforcement actions under state securities laws. Basic principles • Disclosure. Organizations that publicly offer securities must tell investors the whole truth about their businesses, fi nancial condition, the securities they are selling, and the risks involved in investing. Investors make their own investment decisions.

• Honest markets. People and firms who sell and trade securities—brokers, dealers, and exchanges— must treat investors fairly and honestly, putting investors’ interests first. Regulation of municipal securities trading • Brokers and dealers who participate in transactions of municipal securities are required to follow the rules of both the SEC and the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB). • The MSRB, which was established in 1975, issues regulations for brokers and dealers who engage in municipal securities transactions. • MSRB rules cover many areas including customer protection, record keeping, clearance and settlement, trade reporting, broker-dealer conduct (including political contributions by broker-dealers and employees who deal with municipal securities), and the submission of information to an electronic system known as EMMA (Electronic Municipal Market Access system), which makes it immediately available to the public on the MSRB’s website (http://www.emma.msrb.org). • Disclosed information includes annual audited financial statements from issuers. • The law emphasizes transparency.

Source: Haines 2009; Canuto and Liu 2013. a. Municipal securities in the United States include securities issued by states, local governments, and their agencies and instrumentalities, including municipalities, districts (such as school districts), special purpose government entities (such as housing authorities), and a variety of other government entities (such as airport authorities). Municipal securities include all debt instruments issued by states and local governments, including bonds, notes, fi nancing leases, and variable rate obligations.

investors learned the hard way about the consequences of defaults, especially in the absence of guarantees that higher levels of government will bail out defaulting subsidiaries. While allowing subnationals to default may have adverse impacts on bank assets and on investors’ appetite, these considerations must be balanced against the negative consequences of moral hazard and bailouts on market development. The regulatory and institutional frameworks for commercial and policy banks and bond markets need to be harmonized to create a level playing field and avoid regulation arbitrage. The credit rating requirement for bond issuance is a particular concern.

Because institutional investors provide their financing through the bond market, the risk rating of their investment portfolios is determined by the ratings of the bonds they buy and is easily overseen by regulators. If bank loans are not subjected to rating, some banks will continue to make risky loans that undercut the entry of more prudent lenders into the market. The borrowers may also opt for easy money that can be gotten through shadow banking, for example. China might consider imposing a mandatory requirement for local government borrowers to have an institutional credit rating irrespective of the instrument used (bank loan, bond, or wealth management product).


FINANCING URBANIZATION

That would have many merits in addition to helping level the playing field. Not only would credit ratings encourage local governments and LGFVs to improve their fi nancial management, but they are an excellent way for borrowers to learn about their own financial strengths and weaknesses before seeking fi nancing for their urban infrastructure project. In addition, ratings can help them determine whether to pursue a bank loan, a syndicated loan, or a bond issue. Local governments and LGFVs with strong credit ratings may be in a good position to seek the best terms on loans from competing banks or syndicates. Governments and LGFVs with weaker credit ratings will find that well-structured HBs can achieve much higher credit ratings than their institutional rating and thereby enable them to access financing at lower cost on better terms than would be the case using bank loans. By helping borrowers to better target their lenders and by getting lenders to compete, institutional credit ratings can help reduce the cost of intermediation and thereby the cost of financing urban infrastructure. Mandatory ratings also improve the financial intermediation process. The most efficient way for lenders (whether commercial banks or institutional investors) to get objective information about borrowers’ credit risk is to review their credit rating report. That is as true for lending by policy banks and commercial banks as it is for investors in municipal bonds. Ratings are not intended to substitute for fi nancial due diligence, but they provide an efficient way for lenders and investors to determine if potential borrowers warrant additional credit analysis or should be passed over until they are more highly rated. By sorting out the potential borrowers quickly, credit ratings improve the efficiency of the intermediation process and make credit analysis more focused. Mandatory ratings also make it easier for the regulators of banks and institutional investors to assess the risk profi le of banks’ loan portfolios and institutional investors’ securities portfolios. In particular, more transparency about the risk of loans to specific local governments and LGFVs improves the calculation of a bank’s capital adequacy,

and banks will become more sensitive to local government and LGFV credit risk in their lending operations. Bank lending to local governments should be regulated in a way that reinforces local governments’ budget discipline and fiscal transparency. Commercial bank lending is normally bound by general prudential rules, which, if applied to local governments, would restrict the governments’ opportunity to borrow from such vehicles. Such rules include exposure limits, which limit a bank’s loan exposure to a single client; concentration limits, which limit a bank’s exposure to a certain type of client such as all local governments taken together; and insider lending limits, which limit lending to the owners or co-owners of the bank. China might review whether these rules are effectively enforced. In addition to these norms, many countries have innovated other measures to reinforce discipline. For instance, after experiencing widespread subnational defaults, several countries, including Brazil, banned subnational ownership of financial institutions altogether. In Mexico, competitive lender selection and transaction ratings were required for largescale long-term financing. Although these requirements are not mandatory, banks lending to unrated subnational governments would need to have a high capital adequacy ratio. Shadow banking would need to be regularized to limit easy money for local governments. All asset management products should be subject to the same fundamental regulatory standards. Regulatory policy for all collective investment products should be coordinated among authorized bank, insurance, and security regulators. A plan for reforming the legal and regulatory framework of shadow banking should include short-term amendments of regulations and long-term amendments of primary legislation. Investments in wealth management products, trust funds, or other collective investment schemes should not be protected by implicit guarantees. The role of policy banks in the provision of long-term finance should be reoriented. The policy banks should be reformed to address market failures for long-term mar-

419


420

URBAN CHINA

ket based fi nancing through various instruments such as co-investment, guarantees, and credit enhancements. Policy banks could reduce their excessive dependence on government guaranteed bonds and leverage their resources by exploring new ways to fi nance their new operations on a sustainable basis, such as well constructed securitizations of their loan portfolios, loan syndications, and cofinancing schemes with other state-owned and private financial institutions. In addition, policy banks could play a catalytic role in supporting the use of long-term capital markets instruments. The bank could issue innovative fi nancial instruments that would support the growth of fixed-income markets; provide bond guarantees (on a fee basis as a credit enhancement) for municipal bonds; and purchase a limited portion of new municipal bond issues, serving as a market-maker by buying or selling bonds as needed by other investors. Promoting market competition and preventing moral hazard in government lending is important. The performance of policy banks should be evaluated regularly on these two grounds.

Clarify the role of housing provident funds The steps China’s government is taking in the housing area require great care. International experience shows that a key to the provision of affordable housing is an overall well-functioning housing system, one that is efficient and responsive to the needs of all segments of the population, including the poor who are able to access housing at reasonable prices. Housing needs to be understood as an interlocking ecosystem where consumers of different income segments, the construction industry, fi nanciers, and local and central government bodies interact dynamically. Governments that have successfully made housing affordable are those that have played an enabling role, intervening to overcome market failures while also ensuring that their actions do not distort housing markets. Their actions have systematically and simultaneously addressed the causes of market failures by, first, focusing on demand and supply side constraints and, second, putting in place poli-

cies that improve management of the housing sector as a whole. Governments can use various policies that enable them to carefully balance and coordinate the fluid interaction of those within the ecosystem and thereby support housing affordability. Without such an integrated intervention, a patchwork of “affordable housing” programs will only be dealing with the symptoms of the housing problem rather than its causes. China’s housing policies should encourage transparency and the targeting of its subsidies to match its policy goals. The country has achieved great success in meeting its low-income housing construction targets, yet great vulnerabilities remain in how the policies are being implemented. These include fi nancial risks to the municipalities and the housing provident funds, challenges in housing workers migrating to urban areas, social segregation, and risks to the economy overall. Local governments should carry out a careful analysis of housing demand (demographic and socioeconomic conditions) and supply (types of housing available for different income groups, at what cost), and then use the findings to determine the housing needs of the locality. This approach will enable local governments to define the nature, scope, and policy interventions required to effectively align housing demand and supply. A “National Housing Observatory” could be established to collect systematic information on housing supply and on demographic and socioeconomic conditions and thus capture trends in housing affordability and fi nance. Such an institute would facilitate monitoring of the sector’s performance by policy makers. A good example of an institute that independently collects and analyzes such information is the Canadian Housing and Mortgage Corporation. China would benefit from giving municipalities more flexibility in achieving their low-income housing construction goals. Rather than mandating a specific number of a particular type of units, broad goals could be set for each municipality, which could then be required to develop a specific plan on how to achieve these targets. The overall plan would include a market study, a market plan, a fi nancial plan, an analysis of job growth


FINANCING URBANIZATION

and infrastructure needs, and a long-term management plan including contingencies. The role of housing provident funds should be clarified in the context of a broader clarification of government’s role in housing. These long-term savings funds are established for the purpose of housing the employees who contribute to them, and the cumulative funds in the accounts belong to the employees. Great care must be taken not to conflate the purpose of HPFs with that of serving national or local housing goals such as affordable housing. Moreover, providing mortgage loans and project loans in the same institution without clear lines of delineation is a potential conflict of interest. Using HPFs to pay for operational costs of public rental housing projects should be prohibited unless it is clearly specified in the loan agreement. Actuarial analyses with stress tests of the HPFs should be performed. Given the high housing prices, the large-scale, long-term HPF investments in projects, and mortgage finance for members, the funds are potentially in a financially precarious position. Understanding the risks under different scenarios would enable them to adjust their policies. It would also enable the Government of China to adjust its own policies if it sees negative trends in the HPFs. The Regulatory and Supervisory Framework for mortgage lenders and housing financiers should be strengthened, particularly with respect to housing provident funds. The Ministry of Housing and Urban and Rural Development should establish standards of lending and operational procedures closely in line with China Banking Regulatory Commission’s model and best international practices. The risk analysis recommended for the HPF portfolios would provide important information for improving regulations. China should explore means other than HPFs for financing an affordable housing program, such as direct subsidies from the government budget, mobilization of assistance from employers to their employees, and partnership with the private sector. Additional subsidies will be necessary to ensure sustainability, particularly for low-income renters. Since the central government provides little funding for subsidies, the municipali-

ties will need to generate their own revenue sources. One option is property taxes. That could certainly generate revenue, but Chinese municipalities might consider tax abatements for properties that have received public subsidies, especially low-income rental properties. Rental income from low-rent housing is currently exempted from business tax, real estate tax, and from the urban land tax. Higher rates could be applied to vacant properties, those properties that have been under construction or unfi nished for a predetermined period of time (two to three years) and for other properties owned by the same family. Demand-side subsidies can be an effective tool both in providing housing and in increasing the housing supply. Developed countries almost universally have moved away from the model where the government finances, builds, manages, and maintains public housing. Rather, the trend has been toward demand-side subsidies, such as downpayment assistance for homeownership and vouchers or conditional cash assistance for rental housing. This type of aid gives the consumer a greater role in the selection of his housing unit. Moreover, the supply of money going to consumers has been shown to increase the supply of affordable housing. Examples of subsidies to households include capital grants towards home purchase (such as assistance for a down payment) or rental vouchers. Successful examples include a rental assistance program to low-income households under the Section 8 Program in the United States enacted in 1974, which provides housing vouchers or direct payments to private landlords. Under the program, tenants choose where to live and pay about 30 percent of their gross income for rent, with the remainder of the market rate rent subsidized by the program. Unleashing the constraint of land supply for housing could improve the supply of lowincome housing. Land sales should be conducted through a competitive bidding process without regard to its use for industrial, commercial or residential purposes. The government could allow for rural collective construction land to enter urban land markets, improve the inventory of public land, identify underused parcels that could be put toward

421


422

URBAN CHINA

affordable housing development, and authorize collectives in urban villages to redevelop their land for housing and allow them to invest in formal rental housing. These steps could help increase the supply of affordable rental units and improve housing conditions for migrants and low-income households while also offering collectives new and significant income sources. Bangkok offers a good example of formalizing informal settlements by allowing communities to upgrade their housing in situ and gaining security of tenure with the support of Community Organizations Development Institute. Employers could play a role in supporting affordable owned and rented housing for their employees. Because they benefit from workers and professionals coming into urban areas, this can take a number of forms: matching funds for down payments for owned housing that employees can access after a predetermined period of employment or assistance with mortgage payments for an initial period. For rentals, a company could agree to rent a block of apartments from a public entity at market rates and then provide a discounted rent to its employees. It could also provide monthly support for rental housing that declines over time.

Promote public-private partnerships A public-private partnership, at its core, is a contractual agreement between a public agency and a private sector entity resulting in greater private sector participation in the fi nancing and delivery of infrastructure projects. Using PPPs as a form of delivery of public goods represents a step away from the traditional procurement of infrastructure toward a more sophisticated engagement with the private sector, with the expectation of capturing value for money through efficiency gains and lowering of the life-cycle costs of projects. China should consider developing uniform and credible standards, regulations, and a legal framework to encourage publicprivate partnerships to engage in urban development, including the construction of urban infrastructure, the delivery of urban services, and the construction and sale or rental of affordable housing.

The potential advantages of moving to PPP arrangements and attracting private investment for cities in China would be substantial. First, PPPs could improve the operational performance of the infrastructure facilities by tapping into the technical expertise in the private sector. The efficiency gains, with a welldesigned PPP contract and full competition, could be captured by the government, thus reducing the fiscal burden of cities, and the need to borrow more or increase taxes.22 The freed-up fiscal space could then be used for social services. Second, because the private sector would be paid largely from the revenues generated from users of the facility, the infrastructure capacity would be designed to fit the projected demand, rather than the current practice of building infrastructure assets beyond the projected demand requirements. PPPs would thus optimize the scale of infrastructure assets being developed. Having the right scale of infrastructure would contribute to the sustainability of the cities by reducing resource use requirements. Finally, PPPs could facilitate the transformation of the role of government. In the 1980s, in an attempt to reduce public spending and reduce inefficiencies, countries led by the United Kingdom (under Margaret Thatcher) and the United States (under Ronald Reagan) pushed on reform of public enterprises and greater private participation in all economic sectors. The infrastructure industry gradually started to change, marked by a shift from public to private financing and provision of infrastructure and the introduction of the principles of competition and commercialization. The role of the public sector changed from direct and active actor in the provision of public goods and services to one of regulator, facilitator, and user of such goods and services. By the 1990s, PPPs, as currently defined, were introduced and provided with models of private sector involvement more attuned to public services provision. For the duration of the contract, the concessionaire (or private partner) typically will build (or rehabilitate), manage, maintain, operate, and control the assets in exchange for some combination of user fees and government transfer or payment, which is its compensation for the investment and other


FINANCING URBANIZATION

costs. The corresponding government commits to make in-kind or fi nancial contributions to the project, whether through subsidies, guarantees, shadow fees, or availability payments. Therefore, to capture value for money through efficiency gains, the Chinese government needs to consider carefully the following issues. First, attracting private investment may require higher user charges to make the investment profitable for private investors. If government is not prepared to accept cost recovery tariffs for the service, it would have to provide for subsidies from the budget. Second, PPPs can create direct or contingent liabilities on the government, which should be carefully managed. If the private operator fails, the government will likely have to take on its obligations to prevent the service from collapsing. Third, providing public services through PPPs adds a layer of complexity in operations and requires considerably more detailed legal agreements and more complex bidding processes than those needed for government-built and operated facilities. All of these issues can be managed, and there is ample international experience in all of these, but government should be aware

BOX 6.7

of these issues as it further develops its PPP framework (box 6.7). A PPP framework should be tailored to existing laws but may also require changes to laws or policies that are not compatible with PPPs. At the national level, a single PPP law should guide approval processes across sectors and regions. 23 That can both simplify the project approval system and facilitate prudent decision making at the local level. Local governments need to make policies to create the incentive for participation from the private sector, and establish a regulatory system for guiding regulating PPPs. Of great importance in a PPP framework is its provision for resolution of contractual disputes. To attract private investors, PPP contracts may need to include contract-specific dispute resolution mechanisms that may be based on national or international arbitration and other administrative processes before moving the dispute into the courts. Other legal safeguards also need to be present in the form of effective application of the rule of law and effective regulatory oversight. Local governments need to introduce a competitive mechanism along with innova-

Australia: A leading model in implementing public-private partnerships

Australia is a model example of public-private partnership (PPP) development from the creation of upstream policy frameworks through downstream implementation. Several reviews of the existing Australian PPP portfolio express confidence in this model of public service delivery and are optimistic on the performance of PPP projects in comparison with traditional procurement. Furthermore, project outcomes from PPP projects in Australia, as measured by cost savings and delivery performance, outstrip their public sector comparators. Australia has entered into the third decade of PPP contracts and has developed a set of unique skills and strong policy frameworks to meet the challenges of implementing an effective and output-based PPP program. In 2008, the Infrastructure Australia Act came into effect with a new integrated approach to planning, funding, and implementing public infrastructure projects. Some contributing factors to

the success of Australia’s PPP program include the following: • A PPP policy framework underpins the principles of when to use PPP and how to assess projects and appropriate implementation processes. • The PPP policy guidelines set out the guiding principles within which the public sector should operate. • The PPP Unit in Victoria plays a critical role in regulating the PPP process by providing guidance to the government, as well as providing governance structure in its early days when new PPPs take shape. • The auditor general’s review of the procurement process of the PPP contracts led to subsequent improvements in PPP procurement practices, such as the bid submission process, competitiveness during the bidding period, and optimization of risk allocations.

423


424

URBAN CHINA

tive modes of operation to promote openness, transparency, and efficiency for PPPs. To open up competition, public agencies should be restructured with transparent financial reporting on their costs, subsidies received from the budget, and the quantity and quality of delivered services. Open bidding should be set as a norm to create more opportunities for the entry of private players. To fully capture the benefits of these partnerships, China might shift the focus of PPP contracts from capital financing toward service provision. Service focus could be achieved by bundling investment for asset creation with operation and maintenance requirements over a long period of time (such as 20 years). PPPs for most types of urban infrastructure and service and affordable housing delivery will depend on local government payments over the lifetime of the PPP contract. In these cases, local governments should be allowed to make multiyear fi nancial commitments. Future financial contributions to PPPs need to be kept to a fiscally sustainable level, and the best way to do that is to ensure they are kept within the expected, future level of recurrent revenue. These observations reinforce the case for fiscal reform. If, for example, the system of fiscal decentralization provided local governments with a stronger revenue base than they currently have, they would be in a better position to engage private partners through PPPs. Expanding PPPs in the future will inevitably increase governments’ contingent liabilities, and a careful risk assessment and proper risk-sharing system is needed. PPP contract arrangements need to clarify the risk-sharing arrangements. Governments should bear only those risks that they can best manage, which generally are those that they can control or at least influence. The rules governing PPPs should ensure that the officials and ministers in charge have incentives, information, and the capability to take account of the costs and risks of contingent liabilities. More specifically, PPPs should be approved by the cabinet, the Ministry of Finance, or some other body with an interest in future spending. The Ministry of Finance or the fi nance departments of local governments, or both, should review proposed PPPs. Cost-

benefit analysis should be used to select projects, and value-for-money analysis should be used to choose between PPPs and traditional public procurement. The costs and risks of contingent liabilities should be quantified, and budgetary systems should be modified to capture the costs of contingent liabilities. A guarantee fund should be used to encourage recognition of the cost of guarantees when they are given or to help with payments when guarantees are called. Governments should charge fees for guarantees. PPP contracts should be published, along with other information on the costs and risks of the fi nancial obligations they impose on the government. Modern accrual accounting standards should be adopted for financial reporting, to reduce the temptation to use PPPs to disguise fiscal obligations (World Bank Institute and PPIAF 2012). China could improve the institutional capacity of governments to lead and promote PPP at the local level by creating a special PPP unit. Experience from more than 20 developed and developing countries shows that such a unit is more likely to have the necessary expertise to oversee projects with standardized processes and achieve scale economies in management, ultimately maximizing public benefits. For China, such special PPP units might be established at the provincial level, given the scale and regional variation of development. Potential conflicts among their promotional, advisory, and evaluation roles could be avoided by having the fiscal risk assessment carried out by an impartial entity; as noted, the fi nance departments might be given the task of deciding whether to use public procurement or PPPs on a comprehensive value-for-money assessment.

Improve financial management and governance These reforms in urban finance—public finance, land finance, debt finance, and partnerships with the private sector—will empower city governments with more control over taxing, revenues, and borrowing, and more autonomy in locating resources to fi nance expenditures on local needs. City governments would then have a better chance


FINANCING URBANIZATION

of capturing the opportunities and managing the risks brought about by city development. At the same time, however, the power of city governments has to be balanced with strong governance to maintain a proper balance between efficiency and equity; only with this balance between authority and accountability will China’s urbanization be efficient, inclusive, and sustainable.. Top priority should go to building capacities for financial management, by bringing a medium-term perspective to public finance management and by promoting accountability through transparency and a streamlined hierarchy government structure.

Strengthen public finance management through a medium-term perspective The government’s urbanization plan will have far-reaching fiscal implications across numerous sectors regarding revenue, expenditure, and debt over the medium term. Many fiscal policies undertaken today may have broad intertemporal effects. Examples include the effects of current public investment on future operation and maintenance spending, the impact of current land development spending on future land leasing revenue, and the effects of current spending on education and health on future productivity. Similarly, a mediumand long-term horizon is required to assess the financial sustainability of current debt policies and the effect on liquidity risks of the fi nancing terms applicable to LGFV liabilities. Formulating and implementing such a plan in a fiscally sound manner would be difficult without using a medium-term budget perspective. Moreover, government anticipates a slowing of growth even as it works to address the significant imbalances between the needs of local governments and their fiscal capacity, while maintaining a healthy debt-to-GDP ratio; that combination makes the need for medium-term fiscal planning all the more important. Conceptually, medium-term expenditure frameworks (MTEFs) promise numerous benefits: strengthening the links between planning and budgeting, including by sharpening the strategic allocation of resources over the medium term; strengthening the abil-

ity of fiscal policy to address structural challenges, such as demographic change and business cycles; strengthening the efficiency and effectiveness of spending, including through programming multiyear projects and their recurrent cost implications; and providing greater reliability to subnational governments dependent on transfers from the central government. Among these, a core advantage of MTEFs is the bringing together of planning and budgeting, which is especially important in countries with five-year plans but annual budgets. A recent, comprehensive analysis by the World Bank shows that MTEFs are indeed associated with many of the hypothesized benefits (World Bank 2013a). The term medium-term expenditure framework covers a range of approaches, from more basic ones to more sophisticated ones. The first stage can be considered a medium-term fiscal framework, which is essentially the determination of the total amount of resources available (macroeconomic-fiscal framework) during the medium term and their allocation across broad spending categories (sectors or agencies). The fiscal framework is thus based on a “top-down” approach. The second stage, the mediumterm budget framework, incorporates multiyear budget requests prepared by spending agencies, which must be reconciled with the sectoral ceilings and the overall resource envelope. The budget framework thus brings in the “bottom-up” dimension. The third and most sophisticated stage is the mediumterm performance framework, which moves the budget’s focus from inputs to outputs and outcomes, thus encouraging the allocation of funds based on results. By 2008, 132 countries had adopted MTEFs. To be sure, MTEFs are not panaceas, and their success depends on initial conditions including the institutional context, appropriate design, and sound implementation. The key challenge for China is the robustness of annual budgeting, including budget credibility, measured by the divergence between budget documents and actual spending; and approval of the budget after the start of the fiscal year; budget comprehensiveness that is, whether there are extrabudgetary funds and the use of multiple budgets (such as a public fi nance budget, a

425


426

URBAN CHINA

state funds budget, and so on); complexity, or the number of budgetary entities; and budget reporting, in terms of analyzing the on-going execution of the budget and the impact of spending in light of the five-year plans and their targets (Deng and Peng 2011). A medium-term expenditure framework with Chinese characteristics is likely to provide benefits that a limited and simple annual budgeting approach cannot offer. To successfully adopt a medium-term budget perspective, China might consider three steps: Harmonizing the MTEF with on-going and planned public financial management (PFM) reforms. With the aim of making the annual budget sufficiently robust to enable construction of a multiannual budget process, China might consider using the MTEF reform to drive the next phase of overall PFM reform. That is, to implement an MTEF, some existing challenges in PFM would need to be addressed simultaneously. Using the MTEF as the driver, or key reform concept, would enable the Ministry of Finance to identify and sequence the priorities for reform over time, ensuring design of a comprehensive and prioritized reform plan. Identifying challenges that the MTEF should focus on addressing. The specific challenges that China might want to address in introducing an MTEF will play an important role in how it is designed. For example, if China wants to shift from a “bottom-up” orientation to a more “top-down” budget allocation process, the MTEF can play a key role by focusing on sound aggregate and departmental expenditure ceilings and limiting policy decisions outside of the annual budget process. Or if China wishes to focus on more robust efficiency and effectiveness in spending, the MTEF would play a key role in bringing together the recurrent and capital budgets. It would be important for the government to articulate a rationale for the MTEF to help motivate and design it. Appropriately designing an MTEF that could fit China’s existing public financial management system. Implementing a full medium-term budget outlook would, of

course, take a number of years and would need to be phased in. But immediate steps could be taken to gradually develop a multiannual perspective in budgeting. Toward that end, careful consideration should be given to the immediate steps needed to strengthen key supporting fiscal capabilities and pilot building blocks of a medium-term budget outlook. Given the existing challenges in China, it would seem to make the most sense to start with the fiscal framework. In doing so, attention should be given to building several core capacities: macroeconomic forecasting; revenue forecasting; the capacity for using a medium-term fiscal framework model; the development of multiyear ceilings; and the piloting an improved methodology for program costing. In addition, a number of design, institutional, and technical issues would need to be considered: coverage (categories and levels of government spending, such as recurrent and capital spending, to be included); level of detail (disaggregation of spending by economic type and agency); time period covered and frequency of updating; dealing with uncertainty (setting up a contingency reserve fund, for example); and institutional roles and responsibilities for implementation. Additional analytical and technical inputs might be needed to prepare an adequate design proposal and an MTEF implementation roadmap. It might also be useful to develop a pilot MTEF model at a subnational government level (where there is limited reliance on transfers, for example) and also pilot a medium-term budget framework in selected sectoral budget agencies.

Enhance transparency China experienced relatively rapid expansion in public service provision coupled with deepening decentralization to provincial and subprovincial governments over the past 10 years. With continued but slower growth expected in the coming years, along with an aging population and rapid urbanization, the demand for equal access to better public services will continue to increase. These developments are likely to place a strain on services and outcomes for citizens. Transparent performance management will track results dur-


FINANCING URBANIZATION

FIGURE 6.8 Budget transparency trends in the OECD and China, 2008–12 a. OECD transparency trends 72.0

Open Budget Index

71.5 71.0 70.5 70.0 69.5 69.0

2012

2010

b. Fiscal transparency in China, 2008–12 15

Open Budget Index

ing this time of transition and establish a basis for government and citizen engagement to increase access to and the quality of services. Transparency is increasingly at the heart of accountable, representative, and well-performing government. As Premier Li Keqiang recently said, “It is imperative to build an innovative and clean government under the rule of law. Clean governance is the cornerstone for the credibility of a government, and is expected by the people. Open and transparent use of power is the key to building a clean government.”24 Indeed, international literature provides robust evidence that openness and transparency assist in strengthening accountability and building citizen trust and engagement. Transparency could bring numerous benefits to the country: transparency is often associated with better socioeconomic and human development indicators, higher competitiveness, and reduced corruption. More transparent countries tend to have better credit ratings, better fiscal discipline, and less corruption. In addition, reforms that enhance openness and accountability can lead to increased responsiveness from service providers and less corruption and can empower the poor (Kaufmann and Bellver 2005; Hameed 2005). Moreover, g reater transparency in procu rement (through public access to information on government contracts, and fair opportunities for contractors and suppliers) can also have a significant impact on the efficiency of public expenditure and the attainment of value for money. China has taken steps toward greater transparency in public spending in recent years. The new leadership has promised to make more rapid progress in this regard, and some specific types of expenditure, over which the public had voiced concerns, have been addressed recently. However, the level of fiscal transparency is still low compared to member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the Group of 20 (G-20)—and may be declining. China still has one of the least transparent fiscal and budget processes in the world (figure 6.8). The most recent estimates show that China’s fiscal transparency score has been

10

5

0

2008

2010

2012

c. Fiscal transparency: China compared with the G20 South Africa United Kingdom France United States Russian Federation Brazil Germany India Korea, Rep. Indonesia Mexico Italy Turkey Argentina China Saudi Arabia 0

20 40 60 80 Open Budget Index

Source: Open Budget Survey: China 2012. Note: OECD = Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

100

427


428

URBAN CHINA

declining over the past five years. China does relatively well on publishing in-year, yearend budget and audit reports; however, after more than a decade of budget reform and increasing transparency at the central level, a large gap remains at the subnational level, especially given the size of extrabudgetary funds. These areas are in need of reform. Relatively easy gains could be made by also publishing the executive’s budget proposal as well as the enacted budget, both of which are currently produced but used for internal purposes only. The in-year and end-year budget reports could also be strengthened by increasing the comprehensiveness of information provided, including explanatory notes on the differences between the budget and actual spending and greater disclosure of assets and liabilities. The level of fiscal transparency varies across jurisdictions, and on average China lags behind most others in government transparency. Information about actual expenditures, off-budget transactions, and actual government performance, is patchy and limited in most jurisdictions. Some pockets of innovation are emerging in some jurisdictions, such as the district of Minhang in Shanghai, which is piloting performancelinked budgeting and is pursuing transparency through the Internet (box 6.8). Lack of transparency is particularly costly for China. On the one hand, it limits the

BOX 6.8 Performance-informed budgeting in the Minhang district, Shanghai Minhang is piloting a performance-oriented budget reform that covers key social spending programs, for which objectives and performance indicators and targets are incorporated into the annual budget documentation and submitted to the district people’s congress for review. Evaluations of these programs, some by third parties, are also undertaken, provided to the people’s congress, and posted on the web. Reviewing and strengthening the pilot, and then rolling it out to other subnational governments, could help improve transparency. Source: http://www.shmh.gov.cn/.

central government’s capacity for monitoring budget implementation and results at the subprovincial level. Hence, the accountability chain from central government to citizens is weakened when local governments are unable to provide timely information about the coverage and quality of services delivered. On the other hand, the quality of administrative data provided by local governments to higher levels is also limited. In some cases, subnational governments fi nd it difficult to generate sufficiently high-quality performance data to meet the needs of the national government; in other cases subnational governments have been known to manipulate data to attain certain ends, such as qualifying for more transfers. This problem has led the national government to provide more and more transfers in the form of narrowly earmarked programs that require compliance with national government objectives but that limit discretion of subnational governments to adjust programs and allocate resources to meet local needs. This negative cycle of decreasing trust, increasing control, and increasing strategic local government behavior may be contributing to reduced spending efficiency and greater administrative and transaction costs. Making more of the subnational government data public and opening it to the scrutiny of citizens would increase the credibility of the data and make it more useful. Indeed, the central government could enlist the help of citizens in holding local governments more accountable. At its foundation, this step would represent a change in political and bureaucratic culture, moving away from practices of confidentiality toward more open communication, not only with the public but within governments themselves in the discharge of their duties. A modern approach to government transparency is fast becoming the norm as governments establish initiatives and agencies charged with making information available to management and to the public. China could draw from international good practices. Collecting and publishing fiscal, assets, and liabilities information. Transparency includes having an independent audit of


FINANCING URBANIZATION

national and subnational financial accounts, making periodic public disclosures of key fiscal data, exposing hidden liabilities, and moving off-budget liabilities on budget. China will need a comprehensive budget reporting that covers four government budgets and other public activities carried out by public utilities or SPVs but mainly funded by governments. The classification of budgetary expenditures should distinguish between recurrent and capital expenditures. The debt reporting should cover government direct borrowing, guarantees, and contingent liabilities. The fi nancing of deficits of large public sector undertakings, which implicitly are government liabilities, should be reported as an annex to the main financial statement. Changing the accounting method from cashbased to accrual accounting for all level of the governments could eliminate an important source of hidden liabilities: arrears. Linking with performance information. China could compile and publish a citizens’ budget. These have been increasingly used as a way to make information about fiscal and service delivery outcomes accessible to the public. A citizens’ budget for China, which would present basic revenue, expenditure, and fiscal data in an accessible format, could be a useful way to communicate about these issues directly with the public. Transparency—the public availability of fiscal and performance information— is needed to make performance budgeting work. It can help increase public trust in government as part of an open budgeting and performance management framework. Performance budgeting focuses on the results that are being delivered for the resources provided, rather than just on how much money is being spent or transferred to subnational governments. It is an approach that is increasingly being adopted around the world. Over two-thirds of OECD countries now include non-financial performance information in their budget documents. To a large extent, China is already performance driven. The national performance framework is transitioning from being output focused and is increasingly linked to forwardlooking policy targets. China’s 12th Five-Year

Plan sets out clear performance targets that cut across the priority areas of government. Similarly, regional and special plans set out targets for key initiatives, while provincial plans set out policies and targets at the subnational level. The Ministry of Finance is in a unique position to lead a government wide initiative to link fiscal and performance transparency. Performance-linked budgeting can be a useful approach for pursuing this goal. Publishing performance data in national and subnational budgets is an initiative that would anchor China’s performance-driven plans in open government, and that would encourage greater focus, efficiency, and effectiveness in expenditure. To achieve these goals, the main task is to systematically distill and publish a salient set of performance benchmarks tied to budgets and outcomes as experienced by local citizens across the whole of government. To be effective, performance information needs to be meaningful to both service providers and citizens. This balance is often a challenging one to strike, because it is based on an iterative and coordinated process between levels of government and service providers. Often, government information is too broad or vague in meaning to have any substantial public impact. Indeed, there are calls for subnational governments to release more meaningful data to citizens. Two examples for providing performance information to the public come from the United Kingdom and Canada. The United Kingdom’s official open data portal (http:// data.gov.uk) is the home of its transparency efforts. The website contains a substantial and growing amount of information, including central and local government spending data, government contracts, and titles and pay rates for senior civil servants. This initiative has been transformative and has quickly helped the government demonstrate its commitment to transparency and open data. The Canadian province of British Columbia launched an open data portal (http:// data.gov.bc.ca) offering access to more than 2,500 local government datasets to the public. The initiative showed that a high demand for financial data, and remarkably, there was also demand from civil servants themselves

429


430

URBAN CHINA

who benefited from better access to data for management. E-government. Innovations in the use of technology, an area of strength for China, can make it easier to adopt a big-push approach to transparency, particularly as the use of Internet and e-government facilities has been growing in recent years. Such innovations have underpinned a modern approach to transparency in many countries. Transparency is most effective when the government enables citizen participation. The Korean government, for example, has set up a web-based participatory budgeting system. Besides providing public access to real-time fiscal data, D-Brain (http://digitalbrain.go.kr) enables citizen participation throughout the budget process with Internet surveys, cyber forums, and a budget waste report center for citizen reporting of misappropriation or misbehavior. The Minhang District of Shanghai’s experiment with performance-based budgeting is another example of innovative use of information technology (see box 6.8)

Completing province-managing-county reform The hierarchical governance structure is of critical importance in dealing with the effects

of past rapid urbanization, improving access to rural services, and facilitating a more orderly next wave of urbanization. China is a unitary state with one government administratively organized into a hierarchical five-tier governance structure with the central government at the apex followed by provinces, prefectures, counties, and towns and townships. China has the highest number of tiers among large countries (table 6.7). It is worth reexamining how many tiers are needed. Enhanced focus on expanding access to rural services led the Chinese authorities to take a second look at this hierarchical governance structure. In 2002, the national government adopted a policy of developing a harmonious society with special emphasis on rural development and expanding access to rural services. In the context of this policy, it was recognized that the existing local government structure especially prefecturecounty relationships were not conducive to giving rural residents equal access to services. Prefecture governments were perceived to have an urban bias in their incentives and accountabilities and a relative neglect of the concerns of rural residents or even for the food security of the nation. This prompted the central government to encourage reforms of province-managing-county and county-

TABLE 6.7 Local government fiscal tiers in the world Number of tiers

Total By region: South Asia Europe and Central Asia Middle East and North Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Latin America and the Caribbean East Asia and PaciďŹ c North America By income: High income Middle upper income Middle lower income Low income Source: Ivanyna and Shah 2014.

Average population (1,000 people)

Average area (1,000 km2)

Mean

Standard deviation

Mean

Standard deviation

Mean

Standard deviation

2.03

0.80

101.1

175.5

2.13

6.95

2.43 2.00 2.00 2.02 1.74 2.50 2.00

0.98 0.74 0.86 0.76 0.63 1.00 0.00

79.8 29.5 111.8 171.6 63.2 171.4 11.6

75.5 56.3 116.4 178.6 51.9 379.8 6.8

0.32 0.29 5.14 4.09 1.12 1.22 1.32

0.58 0.40 15.68 8.00 1.73 2.53 1.72

1.69 1.76 2.35 2.26

0.67 0.72 0.76 0.82

72.5 67.3 93.9 162.3

119.4 78.8 246.4 178.0

1.13 4.09 1.12 2.58

2.71 13.25 2.32 5.45


FINANCING URBANIZATION

managing-township finances in 2002 on a pilot basis. Subsequently, these reforms were recommended for nationwide adoption jointly by the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and the State Council in 2009 (Zong Fa, 2009, no. 1) and were highlighted as an important priority in the 12th Five-Year Plan. In 2012, the Ministry of Finance advised all provinces to implement these reforms with suitable adaptation to local context. Several provinces including Hubei have now almost a decade of experience with these reforms. The reforms delayered local fi scal governance by allowing direct flow of funds from the province to counties and in the process bypassing the prefecture governments. A careful review of progress with these reforms suggests that they have had a positive impact (Zhao, Ma, and Li 2013). The case for abolishing prefecture as an intermediate tier between province and county can be made on conventional constitutional and economic grounds. First, abolition in itself could be considered a welcome move because China has four tiers of local governance, twice as many as the average in the rest of the world and the highest number among large countries. Second, China’s Constitution does not acknowledge prefecture governments as oversight tiers for county governments. Third, the greater the number of tiers, the more costly local governance is and the greater the perils of coordination failures. Further there is likely to be greater potential for confusion about division of powers and, as a result, duplication as well as neglect in delivery of public services. A lack of clarity in responsibilities is further likely to manifest itself in a lack of government accountability to local residents. Although monitoring and oversight by the higher level could be adversely affected with delayering, that is not likely to be of much concern in this information age with instantaneous communications. The information age diminishes the economic relevance of an intermediate tier in countries with advanced communication and transportation networks and makes larger population sizes in a compact area more economical for local service delivery. Agglomeration economies associ-

ated with compactness of the area (population density) further weakens the relevance of an intermediate tier for service delivery. In addition, the regional functions could be performed by inter local partnerships or agreements and the oversight function of the prefectures could be made the responsibility of the provinces. One also needs to examine local governments, especially intermediate tiers, for jurisdictional design. Any jurisdiction not aligned with the economic service area should have its boundaries redrawn. The province-managing-county reforms moved decision making closer to the people by shifting the power locus from prefectures to counties. The empowerment of counties has led to greater clarity in division of powers and has thereby limited potential for blame shifting for service delivery failures. Local residents now have a much better perspective about who does what and therefore have a greater clarity about who should be held to account. These management reforms have also resulted in greater focus on rural areas and improved access for rural services. Several factors have contributed to this positive result. First, rural counties were given greater funding consistent with enhanced responsibilities. Second, potential for divergence of funds intended for rural areas to urban areas as happened under the prefecture-managingcounty regime have been eliminated. Third, land grabs by prefectures of productive agricultural land from rural counties have been restrained, which should have a positive impact on food security for the nation. The reforms also offer potential for a positive impact on investment climate and urbanization. The location advantages for rural migrants of county-level cities offer great potential for orderly urbanization. Because of their geographic closeness to rural areas, county cities are better placed to absorb rural migrants. These cities have the potential to offer more affordable housing, education, and health care services, and they also typically have less rigid policies in granting residence permits to rural migrant labor compared with metropolitan or prefectural cities. County cities view the influx of rural migrant labor as a positive “demographic dividend� by increasing the size of the productive labor

431


432

URBAN CHINA

force and a larger population to reap economies of scale and scope for city services. The abundant supply of labor and lower wages in turn may improve the competitiveness of counties against prefectural cities in attracting potential investors. In addition, the reforms in the long run are also expected to contribute to more orderly development of urban centers, by constraining the expansion of boundaries of prefectural cities. Moving forward, prefectures as a regional tier providing administrative oversight of counties could be a good candidate for abolition. With the abolition of prefecture government as a regional tier, regional functions could be performed by interlocal partnerships or agreements, and the oversight function of the prefectures could be move upward to the province. This will enhance provincial oversight and coordination responsibilities which could be exercised by absorbing redundant prefecture technical staff into provincial cadres.

The reform agenda and expected payoffs The proposal here is for a comprehensive structural reform rather than a piecemeal fi x of the system. Because the Chinese approach to urbanization fi nance makes it difficult to separate public finance reform, land finance, debt finance, and housing finance, it may be reasonable to consider how the various elements of the reform fit together and the joint impact they might have on the economy. The elements of the reform can be introduced gradually and over time, but developing and making clear the long-run plan to modernize the entire urbanization finance system should be done at the outset. One such comprehensive reform program, discussed above, contains the following elements: • Shift responsibility for financing social insurance programs, including legacy costs, to the central government level. • Authorize subnational governments to adopt specified taxes and to set rates within limits. The tax sources to be used are property taxation, motor vehicle taxes, and the

• • • •

urban construction and management tax/ education surcharge tax. Revamp the revenue sharing system to one that features a single sharing rate for the vertical pool, a formula-based system for distributing the transfers, and a simplified earmarked grant system. Clarify the role of HPFs in the affordable housing program, and explore alternative means to finance the program including direct subsidies from the government budget, contributions from employers, and partnership with the private sector. Regulate the land lease system and change its structure toward higher rates of compensation for farmers, restriction to public purpose activities, and implementation of property taxation to encourage a more efficient use of land. Promote private-public partnerships in broad urban development. Reform LGFVs, and allow local governments and SPVs to borrow within a rigorous regulatory framework. Diversify stable long-term financing for local government and SPVs and align the incentives for them and their lenders. Bring medium-term perspective and transparency into public expenditure management, and streamline the government hierarchy structure by removing the prefecture as a regional government.

This proposed reform package will significantly change the Chinese economic system in many ways (see table 6.8). Among these, the most important payoff will be a stronger market institution. The reforms would allow the market to play a larger role in resource allocation and let the government focus on its core role of delivery of public services, planning, coordination, and regulation. Moving from a derivation-based revenue sharing to a formula system would reduce the incentives for local governments to compete for a tax base. The amount of intergovernmental transfers received would now depend on expenditure needs, such as population size or the concentration of low-income families or the state of urban infrastructure or urbanization, rather than on the amount of new VAT or company income tax generated. The


FINANCING URBANIZATION

433

TABLE 6.8 Comprehensive reform program Subject

Expenditure assignment

Revenue assignment

Intergovernmental transfers

Tariff Policies

Debt

Reform

Transfer responsibility for social security to the central level

Transfer unfunded liabilities in the pension and health areas to the central level Transfer selected subnational functions to the central level Eliminate the 25 percent value added tax (VAT) share to subnational governments Adopt local government taxes Restate the vertical share for intergovernmental transfers in terms of all tax collections. Replace derivation sharing with formula sharing Consolidate conditional and unconditional grants into a single program

Set tariffs to recover the full costs of infrastructure service provision, including the costs of capital, for: • Solid waste collection and disposal • Water supply and distribution • Natural gas distribution • Wastewater treatment plants • Roads and bridges constructed as toll facilities Set tariffs to cover the full costs of operation and maintenance and to make partial contributions to the cost of capital for wastewater collection systems. Give local governments the power to directly borrow long-term for capital investments once they are credit rated. Make credit rating mandatory before any local government can borrow from any source for any purpose. Develop the municipal bond market to provide longterm financing for urban infrastructure.

Land finance

Budgeting

Resolve existing local government bad debts, sharing negative consequences among borrowers and lenders, and simultaneously establish a credible local government insolvency framework Pay a higher rate of compensation to farmers but tax the difference between the buying price and the agriculture price. Revenue generated from long-term leasing of municipally owned land will be earmarked for capital expenditures only. Land leasing revenues will be dedicated to specific capital projects, when these projects raise land values. All land leasing will take place at market values, subject to competitive bidding. Adopt a new budget format that separates current from capital spending and revenues. Adopt accrual-based government accounting rules. Require that all revenues, expenditures, assets and liabilities be fully reported. Phase in medium-term budgeting.

Comments

Full assumption of responsibility and the cost of leveling up benefit differences among provinces, and funding the system including legacy costs would probably bring additional expenditures. Central expenditures would increase, but amounts are unknown Central expenditures would increase, but amounts are unknown This step would shift revenues from the subnational governments to the central government. Options include property taxes, surcharges on central taxes, motor vehicle taxes, and retail taxes on selected products. This reform would shift the distribution of transfers away from the higher-income provinces. This reform would reduce compliance costs but remove targeting of specific areas for spending. Allocation could be shifted to a formula and possibly merged with general revenue sharing above. A regulatory authority will review tariffs to ensure that they meet the prescribed standards

Allowing local governments to access debt market would impose fiscal discipline. Local government financing vehicles (LGFV) would no longer be the only way for local governments to access financing. Ratings promote financial transparency, encourage lenders and investors to price credit on a risk basis, and enable authorities to monitor local government finances based on objective information. This step increases the sources of financing for local governments and SPVs; engages investors that are seeking long-term securities; and strengthens China’s financial sector. This reform eliminates the need for future central government bailouts of local governments, makes the default risk credible to lenders and investors, and thereby reduces moral hazard in local government financing. This reform would slow the increase in land lease sales, reduce public investment in infrastructure, and make debt more affordable.

The reform would permit development of a capital budget, and could lead to transparency, enhanced efficiency and better measures of creditworthiness.


434

URBAN CHINA

choice between investments in education and investments in industrial development would now be on a more level playing field. That should result in more rational decisions about strategies and subsidies for attracting industry. Moving industrial subsidies to the central government would further limit the role of local governments. Moving the LGFVs into the formal local government structure, or to commercial entities, and more generally laying a play field for the private sector would make space for the market to play a role. Central-local government relations will be rationalized. The reform package proposed here would shift some expenditure responsibilities from local governments to the central level. The central government has long been called upon to take over financing responsibility for social insurance (pension and health), which would lead to cost increases for the central government. Other expenditure programs are candidates for shifting to the central government, which would add to the improvement in vertical balance. These include functions where there are significant spatial externalities (environmental protection and natural resource management) and where regional and national coordination is necessary (urban transportation). Expenditure reassignments would be accompanied by revenue reassignments. The central government revenue share would be increased. All tax revenues where the central government sets the tax rate would form the new revenue sharing pool, and a single sharing rate would be applied. The new general rate would reflect the new central government responsibilities. The distribution of revenue sharing among provinces would be done by a formula and by earmarked grants. If serviced population is factored heavily in the formula, metropolitan cities are likely to lose revenues. They then could recapture revenue losses with new local taxes that would be assigned. These would include a revamped set of property taxes, surcharges on central taxes, and motor vehicle taxes. The financing system will be more conducive to the development of an efficient, inclusive, and sustainable urbanization. In addition to efficiency brought by greater role of market in resource allocation, greater

efficiency will be achieved from three other changes proposed here. First, local taxing powers would allow (force) those urban governments that provide better services to charge a higher tax rate to their residents, which would bring about a number of changes in choices made. In cities that provided better (higher cost) services, residents would be asked to pay the higher marginal cost, which would be factored into the location decisions of both companies and migrants and, at least at the margin, contribute to a more efficient mix and layout of cities of various size. This change, together with greater transparency, will stimulate resident groups and business groups to pressure local governments for more cost effective service delivery. Second, a proper rejiggering of expenditure assignments would lead to a better accounting of the external costs and benefits in spending decisions. In cases where the reforms led to more centralization, externalities would be internalized and more efficient levels of service would follow. Examples are natural resource management, environmental protection, food safety, and regional transportation. Third, the increased level of compensation to farmers (and reduced profits to local governments and developers) could reduce land transfer revenues and slow down the rate of increase in peri-urban infrastructure investment. Some excess capacity could be used up, and budget allocations could be focused more on social services and on infrastructure maintenance. Urban fringe development might also be slowed by taxes on property and motor vehicles. That could limit urban sprawl and at the margin lead to more compact development that would better capture agglomeration economies. Whether any of these changes in relative prices will matter, however, depends on the price elasticity of demand for suburban land. This reform package would also have positive impacts on equity. The shift to a formula-based system of intergovernmental transfers would, at least, hold out the possibility of more equalization among provinces by comparison with the current derivationbased system. The transfer formula could be structured to take expenditure needs more


FINANCING URBANIZATION

directly into account and no longer would reward those provinces with a stronger tax base. The degree of equalization that resulted would depend on the formula chosen. A second area where equity gains would be made is with the shifting of responsibility for the financing of social insurance programs to the central government. Lowerincome local governments would no longer be required to cope with fiscal capacity constraints and a heavy concentration of resident low-income workers. Social security would be a national program where benefits and contributions would no longer depend on place of residence. That would also generate efficiency gains by removing an important barrier to labor mobility. Third, equity might be served by revisiting the expropriation and compensation policies now followed in converting farmland into urban land uses. That could happen in one of several ways. Farmers could be given stronger property rights over farmland or homesteads, or both, or the central government could mandate a compensation rate that more closely approximates market value and impose a capital gains tax on the profit. Overall stability could be improved. A property tax levied at a reasonable level, and with the right structure, could help curb speculation in the housing market. Heavier taxes on motor fuels would be consistent with lower-carbon urbanization. Bringing a medium-term perspective into budgeting would enable the government to manage the fiscal implications of urbanization more effectively and mitigate the shocks accordingly. Local government budget discipline is promoted. Forcing local governments to raise some of their own revenue and borrow on budget would move local officials a step closer to accountability and fiscal discipline. Adequate budget provisioning is required for contingent liabilities resulting from local gov-

ernment guarantees on debt undertaken by SPVs delivering local services and on the commitments made by PPPs. Adherence to budget discipline is monitored through annual institutional credit ratings for all local governments and SPVs that want access to fi nancing from any source. Any failure to maintain budget discipline is revealed through downgraded credit ratings that are public information, easily monitored by central government authorities and financial institutions. Financing for local governments is put on a stable foundation. The reform program broadens the sources of long-term fi nancing available to local governments while addressing the problem of moral hazard that undermines the stability of China’s financial sector. Scaling up the use of municipal bonds issued by local government from its experimental phase creates a mechanism for institutional investors to play a much larger role in financing urban infrastructure. Shifting some of this financing burden from policy banks and commercial banks to China’s developing debt market enables banks to diversify and strengthen their loan portfolios with more lending to small and medium-size businesses. It also strengthens and deepens the debt market, thereby contributing to a more flexible and responsive financial sector for China. Gradually resolving the existing bad debts of LGFVs in a manner that shares responsibility among the central government, local governments, and banks is combined with establishing a formal and pragmatic local government insolvency framework. These reforms put fi nancial institutions on notice that an assumption that local government SPV debt is implicitly guaranteed is unwarranted. That forces moral hazard out of the fi nancing process and creates strong incentives for lenders and borrowers to pursue objectively creditworthy financing for urban infrastructure.

435


436

URBAN CHINA

Annex 6A

A technical note on the urbanization finance model

The World Bank developed a model to estimate the total costs of urban infrastructure, social services, and affordable housing, covering both the capital expenditure (CAPEX) and the current expenditures such as the operation and maintenance expenditure (OMEX) in a wide range of key sectors. Urban infrastructure sectors include roads, subways, drainage, sewage, landscaping, garbage, water, and heating; while social service sectors include social housing, education, and health. Arguably, by considering all these sectors, the model provides a fairly comprehensive account of the major amenities urbanites would expect from a livable city in China or elsewhere. Acknowledging the prominence of the public sector in undertaking and fi nancing expenditure programs related to urban infrastructure and social services is quite pertinent to assess the fiscal affordability of the urbanization process. To do so, the model considers the total expenditures to be borne by the public sector (including those related to urbanization as well as many other spending responsibilities) against the resource envelope it commands. The model is then structured in two modules. First, the urbanization cost module quantifies the required expenditures stemming from the urbanization process, projecting these expenditures sector by sector over the period 2013–30 to capture longterm economic and demographic trends. Second, the fiscal space module estimates the total expenditures to be fi nanced by the central and local governments, together with their prospective resource envelope comprising fiscal revenues and borrowings. Financing policies play a key role in linking the two modules because they ultimately determine the share of required urbanization-related expenditures (identified in the investment needs module) that the public sector would finance as part of its total expenditures (ascertained in the fiscal space module). The World Bank model’s projections are predicated on stylized scenarios built upon reasonable assumptions concerning the future pattern of economic growth and urbanization (such as growth of real GDP

and incomes, expansion of urban population, built-up area, and density) and the institutions and policies shaping public-fi nance outcomes (such as fi nancing policies, taxes, spending programs). The Development Research Center (DRC) macro model provides many of the long-term economic and demographic projections that are used as exogenous inputs in the World Bank model, thus ensuring consistency between results obtained from both models. In the World Bank model, the baseline scenario reflects the continuation of the current pattern of urbanization and the perpetuation of existing institutions and policies without drastic reforms. It is characterized by a growing urban population and significant city sprawl. The reform scenario captures the high-quality urbanization pattern that structural reforms might bring about, together with changes in tax, land, and debt-financing policies. Reforms thus lead to even faster growth of the urban population and city densification.

The urbanization cost module Salient economic and demographic fundamentals of the urbanization process affect the expenditures required to build urban infrastructure and deliver social services. Three fundamentals are considered in determining the expenditure needs: urban population, the built-up area, and density. These variables are projected for three categories of urban area (namely, city, county, and town) and for both the baseline scenario and the reform scenario. The urban population results from the total population projected by the National Population and Family Planning Commission, and the urbanization rate estimated in the DRC macro model for the baseline and reform scenarios. The distribution of urban population among the categories of city, county, and town follows the trends observed in recent years, where the relative importance of cities is increasing slightly at the expense of towns. The urban built-up area is projected linearly in the baseline scenario, starting with the 2011 figures for the three categories and subsequently adding a category-specific fixed


FINANCING URBANIZATION

amount each year. The fi xed annual increase in built-up area equals the average expansion observed in 2001–11. 25 In the reform scenario, the urban built-up area is kept constant at the 2012 figure for each category, thus reflecting policy reforms that discourage urban sprawl. Finally, the urban density is defined as the ratio of urban population to built-up area and is projected accordingly.26

Urban infrastructure sectors The urbanization process characterized by the fundamentals described above requires investment in physical capital, most notably for urban infrastructure sectors. Thus, the model postulates that the growth of urban population and density determines the required growth of physical capital stock in these sectors (with the exception of subways). Formally, the required physical capital stock K i,j,t in category i (that is, city, county, or town), urban infrastructure sector j, and year t, is given by where UPi,t is urban population, population, UDi,t is urban density, and the elasticities eUP and eUD are estimated econometrically. For each category and sector, the initial physical capital stock Ki,j,2011 is taken from 2011 data.27 The basic growth specification outlined above projects K i,j,t for roads, drainage, landscaping, and heating. For sewage treatment, garbage treatment, and water, a sectorspecific policy target is added to the fundamentals-driven growth: namely, 100 percent of discharged sewage and collected garbage must be treated by 2030, and the water coverage rate must also be 100 percent by 2030. The target accelerates the projected Ki,j,t by adding a third term to the basic growth speciRatei , j ,t fication: ε iRate where Ratei,j,t is × ln ,j Ratei , j ,t –1 the sectoral rate (that is, sewage treatment, garbage treatment, or water penetration), which increases linearly until reaching 100 percent by 2030, and the elasticity e Rate , which is estimated econometrically.28

In contrast to the other sectors, subways are driven solely by a policy target implicit in the development plans of 34 Chinese cities: the subway lines must reach 14,187 kilometers by 2040, starting from 1,672 kilometers in 2011. Therefore, an average of 432 kilometers of subway lines must be built every year until 2040 to meet the target. Thus, the model assumes the required physical capital stock Ki,j,t in this sector increases in proportion to the average expansion of subway lines. The physical investment requirement in a given urban infrastructure sector is, by definition, the required growth of physical capital stock plus the depreciation of the existing stock. For simplicity, the depreciation is assumed to be a constant proportion of the existing physical capital stock, which is uniform across sectors and varies only across categories: 5 percent if the capital is built in a city, 6.7 percent if built in a county, and 10 percent if built in a town. The physical investment requirement IRi,j,t is then given by Ki , j ,t − (1 − δ i )Ki , j ,t –1 where d i is the categoryspecific depreciation rate. A monetary cost is incurred if and when the accumulation of physical capital takes place. The cost reflects all the expenses incurred in purchasing real assets outright or in building them, and so depends on market prices of real assets, goods, and services, as well as on the overall efficiency of the investment process. A cost per unit of physical capital invested is postulated in the model as a summary indicator of all costs related to real investment. For each category and sector, the initial unit cost PK i,j,2011 is calibrated using historical data up to 2011 on the investment expenditures at current prices and the concomitant gross accumulation of physical capital. Next, to project the unit cost PKi,j,t, the model assumes a time-invariant sectorspecific inflation rate p K j , which captures the expected trends in market prices and investment efficiency. For the baseline and reform scenarios, the sector-specific unit-cost inflation is 6 percent annually. This figure is below the historical average estimated for most urban infrastructure sectors and thus reflects investment efficiency gains vis-à-vis past performance (for example, the estimated unit-cost inflation in roads and landscap-

437


438

URBAN CHINA

ing was 13 percent a year in 2001–10). On the other hand, because the cost structure in these sectors is tilted toward inputs (like labor) whose relative prices would increase along with the rebalancing of China’ growth pattern, the projected 6 percent unit-cost inflation exceeds the projected 3.5 percent GDP deflator inflation. T he requ i re d c apit a l ex p end it u re (CAPEX) in a given urban infrastructure sector is, by defi nition, the physical investment requirement (the quantity of real assets to be invested) times the unit cost (the expenses incurred per unit of real assets to be invested). At current prices, CAPEXs are projected as IRi , j ,t × Pi K, j ,t , whereas CAPEXs at constant prices use P K i,j, 2011 to value the physical investment requirement. The CAPEXs are monetary magnitudes and can be aggregated across categories and sectors. Thus, total CAPEX at current prices in year t K is ∑ i , j IRi , j ,t × Pi , j ,t . The required operation and maintenance expenditure (OMEX) in a given urban infrastructure sector is assumed to be proportional to the replacement value of the physical capital stock. For all categories and sectors, the proportion is 2 percent, and the unit cost proxies the replacement value. The OMEXs at current prices are projected as θ × Pi K, j ,t × Ki , j ,t where q is the proportional factor (2 percent). OMEXs at constant prices use PK i,j,2011 to value the physical capital stock. The total OMEX at current prices in K year t is ∑ i , j θ × Pi , j ,t × Ki , j ,t .

Education Providing education in urban areas requires building schools and hiring teachers. A remarkable policy goal is that mandatory education in urban schools be provided to students whose households hold urban residence, as well as to students currently attending rural schools whose parents are living and working in cities (the migrant population without hukou). Thus, the model postulates that the required urban-education coverage of students to be served is driven by two factors. The fi rst is the number of students living in cities and attending five types of urban schools: primary school, middle-junior

school, high school, high vocational school, and other schools. Starting from the 2011 figures corresponding to the first four urbanschool types, the number of these students is assumed to increase over time following the growth of the urban population underlying the baseline and reform scenarios. 29 The second factor is the gradual absorption of the migrant workers’ children currently receiving mandatory education in rural areas that would move to cities and enroll in urban schools. Nearly 19 million students in rural primary schools and 6.5 million students in rural middle-junior school are estimated to join their parents living in cities.30 Thus, the model assumes that these students will gradually enroll in urban schools, with the transition completed by 2015. For each of the four urban-school types indicated above, indexed by s, the total number of urban students STs,t resulting from both factors is the required urban-education coverage. Monetary costs incurred in providing primary, middle-junior, high, and vocational education in urban areas include labor, OMEX, and CAPEX. The model formulates a cost per unit of student served for labor and OMEX, and a cost per marginal student served for CAPEX. The unit costs summarize expenses to deliver education services, which depend on market prices of real assets, goods, and services, as well as on the overall efficiency of the service delivery process. This approach assumes that each urban student has a fixed endowment of physical capital, so that the (observed) number of urban students STs,t is one-to-one proportional to the (unobserved) stock of physical capital in urban schools. For each urban-school type s, the initial unit costs of labor PLs,2011 and OMEX PO s,2011 are calibrated using 2011 data on these expenditures. The initial CAPEX unit cost PKs,2011 is estimated using historical data up to 2011 on the investment expenditures at current prices and the increase in the number of students attending urban schools of type s. To project costs into the future, it is assumed that the labor unit cost PL s,t increases over time in line with the growth of per-capita nominal income of urban households, which averages 9.3 percent a year in 2013–30, according to the DRC macro model. The


FINANCING URBANIZATION

OMEX unit cost POs,t grows at 3.5 percent a year, in line with the GDP deflator inflation. The CAPEX unit cost PK s,t increases 6 percent a year, in line with the unit-cost inflation in urban infrastructure sectors. Putting together the required coverage and unit costs at current prices projected for the four types of urban schools, the provision of education in year t requires a total labor expenditure O L of ∑ s STs,t × Ps,t , OMEX of ∑ s STs,t × Ps,t , and CAPEX of . Total expenditures at constant prices use the 2011 initial unit costs. Costs incurred in other types of schools cannot be addressed by identifying required coverage and unit costs separately because of a lack of reliable information on the number of students currently enrolled. Thus, to project the required total labor expenditure, OMEX, and CAPEX, it is assumed that the expenditures observed in 2011 would grow at annual rates identical to those postulated for the unit costs of the four main types of urban schools. Note that the model does not deduct the savings in the rural education system arising from the migration of students.

Public health Delivering health services in urban areas requires building hospitals and hiring medical staff. The model focuses only on capital expenditure, however, because government subsidizes the recurrent cost to both rural and urban residents on a capitation basis, thus the net increment of recurrent cost is expected to be negligible. Since there is no homogeneous physical capital good for providing health services but rather a heterogeneous collection of goods (including facilities and medical equipment), the model relies on the number of beds in urban hospitals as a proxy for the requirements of physical capital (or, more broadly, hospital capacity). This approach implicitly assumes that each bed is associated with a fi xed endowment of physical capital, so that the (observed) number of urban hospital beds Bt is one-to-one proportional to the (unobserved) physical capital stock. The required urban-health coverage is then expressed in terms of beds to be endowed with supportive physical-capital goods.

Urban hospital beds and related CAPEX are driven by an assumed policy target concerning the capacity of health facilities to serve urbanites: to make available 6.4 beds per 1,000 urbanites by 2030, which is the average figure observed in high-income OECD countries, starting from the current availability of 3.6 beds per 1,000 urbanites. Thus, the urban population growth and a gradual increase in the beds ratio toward the 2030 target jointly determine the required urban-health coverage measured by Bt. The model postulates a cost per marginal bed to be endowed, which reflects investments to be made in the health sector and depends on market prices of real assets, goods, and services, as well as on the overall efficiency of the investment process. The initial CAPEX unit cost PK 2011 is calibrated using 2011 data on the investment expenditures at current prices and the increase in the number of beds in urban hospitals. The estimated value is RMB 80,453 for a bed. The CAPEX unit cost PKt is assumed to grow at 6 percent a year, as in the urban infrastructure sectors. Providing health services in year t then requires CAPEX K of [ Bt − (1 − δ h )Bt −1 ] × Pt . CAPEX at constant prices use the 2011 initial unit cost.

Social housing Social housing implies construction, operation, and maintenance of buildings. Current policy aims at building 36 million units in the period 2011–15, and raising social-housing coverage to 20 percent of urban households by 2020. In the model, it is postulated that a typical social-housing unit has 60 square meters of floor space, and a typical urban household living there has three people. The required physical capital stock K sh,t in the social housing sector is then defined in terms of the floor space to be built. It is driven by the current policy until 2015 and afterward by the urban population growth and coverage target. Building social housing takes time, and some major monetary costs are incurred before the physical capital built becomes available. In this regard, the model postulates that the physical investment requirement IR sh,t in year t ( the quantity of real assets

439


440

URBAN CHINA

to be invested) equals the average increase in the physical capital stock available in the next two years, 0.5 × (Ksh,t +2 − Ksh,t ).31 A cost per unit of physical capital invested (which will be available over the next two years) is used to summarize all costs related to real investment in the sector. The initial unit cost PKsh,2011 is RMB 2,373 for a square meter of space floor.32 The unit cost PKsh,t is assumed to grow in line with GDP deflator inflation. Finally, the required capital expenditure (CAPEX) at current prices is projected as IRsh,t × PshK,t , whereas the required CAPEX at constant prices uses PKsh,2011 instead. Of the total capital expenditure on social housing, 70 percent is expected to finance through debt. The required operation and maintenance expenditure (OMEX) in social housing is assumed to be proportional to the market value of the physical capital stock. The OMEX proportion q is 2 percent. The market value PKM sh,t is proxied with the average selling price of residential buildings, which was RMB 4,993 for a square meter of space floor in 2011 and which is assumed to grow following unit-cost inflation. OMEX at current prices is projected as θ × PshKM ,t × K sh ,t and OMEX at constant prices use PKMsh,2011.

Fiscal space module Expenditure requirements identified in the urbanization cost module are to be undertaken and fi nanced by the private and public sector, often using borrowing to initially put assets in place and setting tariffs, user charges, and budget resources (subsidies and transfers) to repay debts and operate and maintain these assets. Financing policy options will then determine how much of the urbanization costs will be borne by the central and local governments. These costs will compete with other spending responsibilities, thus posing policy trade-offs and the need to prioritize expenditure programs. In the model, the expenditure share in each urban infrastructure and social service sector is calibrated by looking at the historical ratio between public and total spending. 33 Estimated shares are used in both baseline and reform scenarios, thus implicitly assum-

ing that the current financing policies will be upheld going forward. As for all the other primary expenditures (those not related to urbanization, excluding interest), it is assumed that the corresponding spending programs will be adapted to China’s new growth pattern and thus will expand in line with either the nominal GDP or the nominal per capita income of urban households. Interest payments depend on the borrowing policies pursued, which are discussed below. The resource envelope available to fund all expenditures, referred to as the fiscal space, consists of government revenues and borrowings. While revenues result from the interaction of economic performance and fiscal policies, borrowings (both on- and off-budget) depend on the objectives of debt fi nancing policies as well as on market opportunities. Government revenues include taxes, nontax receipts, and net land-leasing receipts (after deducting the cost of land acquisition and relocation compensation), which are recorded in the Public Finance Budget and the Government Funds. The macroeconomic projections of the DRC macro model provide reasonable proxies for the relevant tax bases of the major tax and nontax revenues. Assuming the tax rates remain unchanged, the revenue projections are consistent with their underlying economic determinants, so that, for example, income taxes grow in line with nominal GDP and consumption tax trails aggregate consumption expenditure. Nontax receipts include rentals from social housing. The rental is expected to be high enough to cover operating and maintenance cost, interest and amortization of construction cost in 30 years. Land fi nancing policies drive the net land leasing receipts. In the baseline scenario, the gross receipts result from leasing 4.4 million mu of stateowned land a year, at a market price of RMB 660,000 a mu in 2012, which subsequently increases 3 percent a year, in line with GDP deflator inflation. Three-quarters of the gross receipts are assumed to cover the costs of land acquisition and relocation compensation. In the reform scenario, instead, land leases are dropped in 2015 and replaced with


FINANCING URBANIZATION

a property tax that likely generates revenues equivalent to 1.6 percent of GDP a year. Borrowings include all direct government debts and the indirect debts of local governments contracted through their financial vehicles. Debt-fi nancing policies determine the net borrowings (after deducting principal amortizations) by setting a target level of public debt relative to GDP. In the baseline scenario, it is assumed that net borrowings seek to maintain the public debt-toGDP ratio at 53 percent, which was the level observed in 2012. In the reform scenario, policies aim to slow the rapid pace of indebtedness incurred by local governments since 2008, when the global crisis erupted. Thus, the target is to attain a debt-to-GDP ratio of 40 percent by 2030. The model assumes that the annual interest rate on outstanding debts is 3.5 percent for the central government and 7 percent for the local governments.

Notes 1. Much of this growth will come from migrant workers, who have less human capital than the existing urban population, and to a lesser extent the conversion of rural areas into urban areas with the concomitant reclassification of the resident population. 2. Official policy requires residence-based, compulsory education for all children. In general, local governments are in compliance with this policy. A recent survey shows that about 80 percent of migrant worker children are now enrolled in public schools. 3. Lall, Timmins, and Yu (2009) evaluated the relative importance of wage differences and public services in migrants’ decisions to move in Brazil. Their findings showed a distinction in preferences according to income level: for relatively well-off people, basic public services were not important in the decision to move, but for the poor, differences in access to basic public services did matter. 4. Woetzel and others (2009) estimated that the increased expenditure of the public sector will accumulate continually, reaching RMB 1.5 trillion, or 2.5 percent of projected urban GDP in 2025. 5. For example, 1 million of 4 million migrant workers in Liaoning province reportedly made social security contributions. 6. Migrants from rural regions receive subsidies on education, pension, and health insurance

in regions of origin, with the central government funding most of these subsidies in the lagging regions. With respect to pension and health insurance schemes, rural residents are charged lower premiums for pension and health insurance schemes, and receive deeper benefits, than are urban residents. 7. Social housing financing is modeled in such a way that the government finances the full investment, of which 70 percent is from debt finance. The government later collects rentals from users, and the rental is set to cover the full operating and maintenance cost and interest and to amortize 70 percent of capital expenditure in 30 years. For simplicity, the rental revenue, estimated at 0.7 percent of GDP in 2012–30, is included in the fiscal space. 8. In China, “local” is used for all subnational governments. 9. There are two important qualifiers to this discussion of revenue centralization in China. First, the payroll contributions to social security are in the subnational government budgets, and the rates of charge vary across provinces. These contributions are collected by the state tax bureau as an agent for subnational government. Second, local governments are responsible for administering the sale of land leases, including setting the purchase price of the farmland and the price of the land lease. Gross land sales revenues were equivalent to about 7 percent of GDP in 2012, almost 30 percent of general government revenues, and exceeded the revenue yield of social security contributions. 10. General transfers in this report include yi ban xing zhuan yi zhi fu and shui shou fan huan in Chinese official documents. 11. “The State Council’s Decision on Reforming Investment Regime,” No. 20 of Guo fa 2004, stipulates that the central government is responsible for investing in project across jurisdictions and river basins. 12. Finance Minister’s Report to National People’s Congress, March 2013, and staff calculation. 13. Article 28 of the Budget Law of the People’s Republic of China (1994) stipulates that “the local budgets at various levels should be compiled according to the principles of keeping expenditures within the limits of revenues and maintaining a balance between revenues and expenditures, and should not have deficits. The local government may not issue local government bonds except as prescribed by laws or the State Council.”

441


442

URBAN CHINA

14. The LGFVs were capitalized by local governments, mostly with free or subsidized user rights to land, and in some cases with a dedicated revenue stream from the local government budget, and in some cases by ad hoc transfers from the local government budget. A typical form of LGFV is an urban development investment corporation (UDIC). Public utilities enterprises and even schools and hospitals could also serve as an LGFV. Some LGFVs may have no other function except for financing. 15. For a comprehensive analysis of the issues, see supporting report 1: Urbanization and Economic Growth. 16. However, when infrastructure is badly planned and managed, borrowing to fi nance it can burden future generations with debt without corresponding benefits. 17. This is from the Administrative Rules for PPP Urban Public Utilities Projects, by the Ministry of Construction, March 19, 2004. 18. Take the road sector as an example. A PPP project must follow the Road Law (2004), Tendering and Bidding Law (1999), Land Management Law (2004), Contract Law (1999), and the Regulation on the administration of toll roads (2004) if it is toll road, and the Decision on Reforming Investment Scheme (2004) if it involves domestic private investment. 19. For example, the central government forbids government guarantees of fi xed returns, but in some local areas, government guarantees are used to attract private funding. Private sector tax exemption by local governments also has been forbidden by the central government since the late 1990s; however, tax exemption is still an important promise in local policy (Chen and Zhang 2009). 20. See http://www.numbeo.com. 21. Broader issues relating to land management— spatial planning, urban development, governance, and resettlement and safeguards—are discussed in supporting report 4, China’s Urbanization and Land: A Framework for Reform. 22. It should be noted that the overall fi nancing costs of investment through PPPs might not be lower. In fact, private operators would likely face higher fi nancing costs than government. This disadvantage can be outweighed by efficiency gains in construction and operation. 23. The newly released rule on government procurement (Rule No. 74 by the Chinese Min-

24. 25.

26.

27.

28.

29.

30.

31. 32.

istry of Finance, on December 19, 2013) is a good start in this direction. “Li Defines Criteria for Fighting Corruption,” China Daily, March 27, 2013, p. 1. Calculated using data from the China Statistics Yearbook of Urban and Rural Construction and the China Statistics Yearbook of City Construction. Density is often defined using the urban area, which is larger than the urban built-up area. But the model focuses on the urban built-up area because it is more relevant to project investment needs. Data from the China Statistics Yearbook of Urban and Rural Construction and the China Statistics Yearbook of City Construction. Linear regression models for each urban category and infrastructure sector are estimated using cross-section data, including 656 cities and aggregates of county and town for 30 provinces. Physical capital stock in 2011 is regressed on urban population, density, and other explanatory variables. Variables are in log, and the estimated coefficients are the elasticities reported in the main text. Physical capital stock in sewage and garbage sectors is assumed to be proportional to the quantities treated because data refer to sectoral outputs and not to the real assets involved in producing those outputs. Data from the China Statistics Yearbook of Education Finance. There is no reliable information on the number of students attending schools in the residual “others” type, so it is assumed that such a number (whatever it may be) remains constant over time. Estimates result from comparing the actual number of students attending primary and junior-middle schools in rural areas against the hypothetical number of students that would attend rural schools if the total student population were distributed among rural and urban schools in proportion to the urbanization rate (mimicking the distribution of the total Chinese population between rural and urban areas). Whereas the urbanization rate was 51 percent in 2011, nearly 70 percent of total primary-school students and 63 percent of total junior-middle-school attended schools in rural areas. Such an asymmetry reveals a backlog of rural students for the urban schools to absorb. Data on the actual number of students are from the China Statistics Yearbook of Education Finance. For simplicity, no depreciation is assumed. Data are from DRC.


FINANCING URBANIZATION

33. Such figures often result from aggregate-level data and should be seen cautiously as working approximations because the limited availability of data precludes any accurate estimation of expenditure shares.

References Baeumler, Axel, Ede Ijjasz-Vasquez, and Shomik Mehndiratta. 2012. “Sustainable Low-Carbon Cities in China: Why It Matters and What Can be Done.” In Sustainable Low-Carbon City Development in China, edited by Axel Baeumler, Ede Ijjasz-Vasquez, and Shomik Mehndiratta. Washington, DC: World Bank. Bahl, Roy. 1999. Fiscal Policy in China: Taxation and Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations. San Francisco: 1990 Institute and University of Michigan Press. ———. 2009. Property Tax Reform in Developing and Transition Countries. Washington, DC: United States Agency for International Development. Bahl, Roy, Johannes F. Linn, and Deborah L. Wetzel, eds. 2013. Financing Metropolitan Governments in Developing Countries. Cambridge, MA: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. Bahl, Roy, and J. Martinez-Vazquez. 2006. “Sequencing Fiscal Decentralization.” Policy Research Working Paper 3914, World Bank, Public Sector Governance Group, Washington, DC. Bahl, Roy, and Baoyun Qiao. 2013. “Reforming the Public Finance System to Fit a More Urbanized China.” Background Paper prepared for China Urbanization Project: Pillar Six. Bahl, Roy, and Geeta Sethi, editors. 2012. “Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations in Latin America: The Case of Argentina, Colombia, Mexico and Peru.” Public Sector and Governance Unit, Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit, Latin America and the Caribbean, World Bank, Washington, DC, June. Bahl, Roy, and Christine Wallich. 1992. “Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations in China.” Country Economics Department Working Paper, World Bank, Washington, DC. Blochliger, Hansjorg, and Camila Vammalle. 2010. “Intergovernmental Grants in OECD Countries: Trends and Some Policy Issues.” In General Grants versus Earmarked Grants: Theory and Practice, ch. 6. Conference report from the Copenhagen Workshop 2009, Korean Ministry of Finance and Danish Ministry of Interior and Health.

Blom-Hansen, Jens. 2010. “The Fiscal Federalism Theory of Grants: Some Reflections from Political Science.” In General Grants versus Earmarked Grants: Theory and Practice, ch. 3. Conference report from the Copenhagen Workshop 2009, Korean Ministry of Finance and Danish Ministry of Interior and Health. Boadway, Robin W., and Anwar Shah. 2009. Fiscal Federalism. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. Canuto, Otaviano, and Lili Liu, eds. 2013. Until Debt Do Us Part: Subnational Debt, Insolvency, and Markets. Washington, DC: World Bank. Chen, Shiyi, and Jun Zhang. 2009. “Empirical Research on Fiscal Expenditure Efficiency of Local Governments in China.” Social Sciences in China 30 (2): 21–34. de Mello, Luiz. 2010. “Fiscal Decentralisation and Public Investment: The Experience of Latin America.” OECD Economics Department Working Paper 824, OECD Publishing, Paris. Deng, Shulian, and Jun Peng. 2011. “Reforming the Budgeting Process in China.” OECD Journal on Budgeting 1: 75–89. Gao, Peiyong, and Dehua Wang, eds. 2012. China Fiscal Policy Report 2012.2013: Housing Security in the Context of New Urbanization. Beijing: China Finance and Economy Publishing House. Haines, Martha. 2009. “Regulation of the Subnational Securities market in the USA.” Presentation to the International Forum on Subnational Debt Management, Zhuhai, China, September 25. Hameed, Farhan. 2005. “Fiscal Transparency and Economic Outcomes.” IMF Working Paper WP/05/225, International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC. Hofman, Bert, and Susana Cordeiro Guerra. 2007. “Ensuring Inter-Regional Equity and Poverty Reduction.” In Fiscal Equalization: Challenges in the Design of Intergovernmental Transfers, edited by Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Bob Searle, 31–60. Amsterdam: Springer. IFC (International Finance Corporation). 2013. Opening remarks prepared for Vice President Jingdong Hua for the Conference on Securitization and Capital Markets Development in China, Beijing. Ivanyna, Maksym, and Anwar Shah. 2014. “How Close Is Your Government to Its People? Worldwide Indicators on Localization and Decentralization.” Economics: The OpenAccess, Open-Assessment E-Journal 8: 2014-

443


444

URBAN CHINA

3. http://dx.doi.org/10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2014-3 Kaganova, Olga, and Gary Windolph. 2012. “Introducing Management of Capital Assets in Secondary Cities in China: Laibin Inception Report.” Background note prepared for the World Bank. Kaufmann, Daniel, and Ana Bellver. 2005. “Tra nspa renti ng Tra nspa renc y: I n itial Empirics and Policy Applications.” http:// mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/8188/. Keen, Michael, and Maurice Marchand. 1997. “Fiscal Competition and the Pattern of Public Spending.” Journal of Public Economics 66: 33–53. Lall, Somik V., C. Timmins, and S. Yu. 2009. “Connecting Lagging and Leading Regions: The Role of Labor Mobility.” BrookingsWharton Papers on Urban Affairs: 151–74. Li, Hongbin, and Li-An Zhou. 2005. “Political Turnover and Economic Performance: The Incentive Role of Personnel Control in China.” Journal of Public Economics 89 (9): 1743–62. Liu, Lili. 2010. “Strengthening Subnational Debt Financing and Managing Risks.” Review of Economic Research 46 (August): F-9. Liu, Lili, and George Peterson. 2013. “Managing Fiscal Risks of Land Financing.” Draft of a Premise Note, PREM Network, World Bank, Washington, DC. Liu, Lili, and Juan Pradelli. 2013. “Monitoring Subnational Debt in China: Strategic Considerations and Policy Options.” Policy note for China Ministry of Finance, World Bank Beijing Office. Liu, Lili, and Baoyun Qiao. 2013. “Restructuring of Legacy Debt for Financing Rural Schools in China.” In Until Debt Do Us Part: Subnational Debt, Insolvency, and Markets, edited by Octaviano Canuto and Lili Liu, 81–108. Washington, DC: World Bank. Liu, Lili, and Michael Waibel. 2008. “Subnational Borrowing, Insolvency and Regulations.” In Macro Federalism and Local Finance, edited by A. Shah. Washington, DC: World Bank. — — —. 2010. “Managing Subnational Credit and Default Risks.” Policy Research Working Paper 5362, World Bank, Washington, DC. Liu, Zhi, and Andrew Salzberg. 2012. “Developing Low-Carbon Cities in China: Local Governance, Municipal Finance, and Land Use Planning: The Key Underlying Drivers.” In Sustainable Low-Carbon City Development in China, edited by Axel Baeumler, Ede IjjaszVasquez, and Shomik Mehndiratta, ch. 4. Washington, DC: World Bank.

Lou, Jiwei. 2013. Rethinking of Intergovernmental Fiscal Relations in China. Beijing: China Finance and Economics Press. Man, Joyce. 2013. “Evaluation of Property Tax Reform and Experiments in China.” Background paper prepared for World Bank urbanization project. Man, Joyce Yanyun, Siqi Zheng, and Rongrong Ren. 2011. “Housing Policy and Housing Markets: Trends, Patterns, and Affordability.” In China’s Housing Reform and Outcomes, edited by Joyce Yanyun Man. Cambridge. MA: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. Martinez-Vazquez, Jorge, and Baoyun Qiao. 2011. “Assessing the Assignment of Expenditure Responsibilities.” In China’s Public Finance in Transition, edited by Joyce Yanyun Man and Yu-Hung Hong, 21–40. Cambridge. MA: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. Martinez-Vazquez, Jorge, Violeta Vulovic, and Yongzheng Liu. 2011. “Direct vs. Indirect Taxation: Trends, Theory and Economic Significance.”In The Elgar Guide to Tax Systems, edited by Emilio Albi and Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, 37–92. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar. Merk, O., S. Saussier, C. Staropoli, E. Slack, and J.-H. Kim. 2012. “Financing Green Urban Infrastructure.” OECD Regional Development Working Papers 2012 /10, OEC D Publishing, Paris, ht tp: //dc.doi. org/10.1787/5k92p0c6j6r0-en. Mikesell, John L., and Daniel R. Mullins. 2011. “Reforms for Improved Efficiency in Public Budgeting and Finance: Improvements, Disappointments, and Work-in-Progress.” Public Budgeting and Finance 31: 1–30. Ministry of Land and Resources. 2008. China Land and Resources Almanac. Open Budget Survey: China. 2012. International Budget Partnership. http://www.oecd.org/gov /budget/database. Painter, David. 2013. “Financing Policies for Urbanization.” Background note prepared for the World Bank. Persson, Petra, and Anna Eriksson. 2006. “From Blind Pursuit of Growth to Balanced Development? An Analysis of the Political Logic of Fiscal Intergovernmental Transfers in China 1998–2003.” Stockholm School of Economics, Stockholm. Peterson, George E. 2003. “Bonds or Banks? Building a Municipal Credit Market.” In Local Government Finance and Bond Markets, edited by Yun-Hwan Kim. Manila: Asian Development Bank.


FINANCING URBANIZATION

———. 2008. “Land Leasing and Land Sale as an Infrastructure Financing Option.” In Financing Cities, George E. Peterson and Patricia Clarke Annez, eds. A copublication of the World Bank and Sage Publications (India Pvt Ltd), Washington, DC and New Delhi. Peterson, George E., and Olga Kaganova. 2010. “Integrating Land Financing into Subnational Fiscal Management.” Policy Research Working Paper 5409, World Bank, Washington, DC. Qiao, Baoyun, and Lezheng Liu. 2013. Intergovernmental Fiscal Relationship and Risksharing Function. Beijing: China Financial and Economic Publishing House. Rojas, Eduardo. 2008. “The Metropolitan Regions of Latin America: Problems of Governance and Development.” In Governing the Metropolis, edited by Eduardo Rojas, Juan R. Cuadrado-Roura, and Jose Miguel Fernandez Guell. Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank and David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, Harvard University. Smolka and Amborski. 2007. Published online: http://www.intechopen.com/books/energyefficiency-a-bridge-to-low-carbon-economy. Wang, Guixin, Jianfa Shen, and Jianbo Li. 2008. “Citizenization of Peasant Migrants during Urbanization in China: A Case Study of Shanghai.” Population and Development 1: 2–23. Wang, Xiao, and Richard Herd. 2013. “The System of Revenue Sharing and Fiscal Transfers in China.” OECD Economics Department Working Paper 1030, OECD Publishing, Paris. Woetzel, Jonathan, Lenny Mendonca, Janamitra Devan, Stefano Negri, Yangmei Hu, Luke Jordan, Xiujun Li, Alexander Maasry, Geoff Tsen, and Flora Yu. 2009. “Preparing for China’s Urban Billion.” McKinsey Global Institute, March. Wong, Christine, ed. 1997. Financing Local Government in the People’s Republic of China.

Hong Kong SAR, China: Oxford University Press. World Bank. 2013a. Beyond the Annual Budget: Global Experience with Medium Term Expenditure Frameworks. Washington, DC: World Bank. ———. 2013b. “China: The Role of Housing Provident Funds in the Construction of Affordable Housing.” East Asia and Pacific Region, World Bank, Washington, DC, July. ———. n.d. “Economic, Financial, and Commercial Review of Urban Water Supply Utilities.” World Bank, Beijing. World Bank and DRC (Development Research Center of the People’s Republic of China). 2013. China 2030: Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative Society. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank Institute and PPIAF (Public-Private Infrastructure Facility). 2012. Public-Private Partnerships Reference Guide Version 1.0, Washington, DC: World Bank. Wu, Weiping. 2013. “Public Private Partnership for Urban Infrastructure Financing and Management.” Background paper for the World Bank urbanization project. Yusuf, Shahid. 2013. “Metropolitan Cities: Their Rise, Role and Future.” In Bahl, Linn, and Wetzel. Zhao, Min, Guangrong Ma, and Lina Li. 2013. “Province-Sub-province Government Relations in China: A Case Study of Hubei Province.” Stocktaking Note for Discussion, World Bank, March. Zheng, Gongcheng. 2012. “Reform and Development Strategy of China Health Security.” Dong Yi Forum. http://www.qstheory.cn/sh/ shbz/201208/t20120828_178251.htm. Zhou, Li-an. 2007. “Governing China’s Local Officials: An Analysis of Promotion Tournament Model [J].” Economic Research Journal 7: 36–50.

445



7 Green Urbanization

Introduction China’s growth model has brought tremendous economic and social rewards over the past three decades but also has come at the enormous cost of resource depletion and local and global pollution. Most resource use and pollution occurs in cities or is caused by demand from cities, which also bear some of the greatest impacts. Continuing on this path is not economically efficient because pollution imposes rising direct and indirect economic costs, even if those costs (to health or the environment) are usually not reflected in markets or in measures of national income. Such development is also not socially inclusive because—while pollution and resource scarcity affect all citizens—the poor are usually most heavily affected and least able to cope. As it seeks to attain high-income status, meet aspirations for a higher quality of life, and ensure that resources are available for future generations, China needs to transition to a growth path driven by more efficient and cleaner production and consumption. For that to become a reality, environmental sustainability must become an explicit policy goal on an equal footing with economic efficiency and social inclusion.

Raising the profile—and the effectiveness—of environmentally sustainable policies in the ongoing urbanization process requires that China’s green governance matches its green ambitions. China has introduced a comprehensive set of environmental laws and regulations, but these have not brought the expected improvements in environmental quality. To achieve better outcomes, China needs to overcome what has been called the “paradox of advanced legislation but weak enforcement.” So far, environmental policy making has often favored narrow technical and engineering solutions over institutional development and economic approaches. Strengthening the incentives and accountability framework for environmental management requires addressing many interrelated challenges, including the following: • First, by international standards and given the size of the problem, China’s nationallevel environmental management capacity is relatively small and should be increased, while many local environmental protection bureaus need more resources and authority to enforce compliance. • Second, incentives to implement environmental policies and complete complementary sector reforms have been weak. 447


448

URBAN CHINA

Changing the cadre evaluation system would encourage local leaders to pursue sustainability goals more forcefully, and extending their tenure, which has dropped over the past decade, would promote longer-term thinking. • Third, more channels are needed for public participation, which in practically all industrial countries is a key element for catalyzing demand for better environmental protection and a higher quality of life. Three main channels could be further opened to complement government efforts: consultation on policy design and projects, with a greater role for environmental nongovernmental organizations (NGOs); facilitation of stronger actions against polluters by adequately resourcing the formal complaint systems at local levels and by broadening access to the emerging environmental court system; and more public disclosure including use of public environmental performance ratings and strengthening of the Open Environmental Information initiative, a program of the Ministry of Environment (MEP). • Fourth, there is a need to sharpen the mix of policy instruments. The most effective instrument to induce resource efficiency and lower pollution is pricing. China has removed many environmentally harmful subsidies and other distortions, but tariffs for energy, water, and other resources do not always fully reflect both the cost of providing them and the external costs that resource production and use impose on health, ecosystems, and the climate. Solid waste tariffs reflect only 10 percent of the cost of services, for instance, and should be adjusted. Road and congestion pricing, even higher parking rates, would more accurately reflect the full cost of using private vehicles. Pricing distortions in the electricity market could be addressed to create a more even playing field for renewable energy, including a well-coordinated and clear carbon-pricing policy. Pricing, however, needs to be complemented with strong regulations, setting ambitious targets for pollution controls and limits on resource use, but allowing for more flexible and market-based approaches to meet-

ing them, such as trading. Finally, better collection and wide disclosure of credible data, greater consideration of market signals, and more efficient management of trade-offs between sustainability and other development goals will improve the quality and enhance the implementation of environmental regulations. For example, affordability concerns should be addressed more through targeted subsidies rather than preferential residential energy tariffs. There are numerous causes of environmental problems in China’s cities, and improving urban sustainability requires a multisector approach. Structural shifts in the economy toward cleaner sectors will help, but only over the longer term. Urban infrastructure and energy sector policies that align environmental objectives with economic and social objectives therefore need to complement more effective green governance. Greening sector policies will require some action at the national level where broad legal and regulatory decisions guide local decisions. At local levels, more comprehensive overall planning supports more specific sector reforms. For instance, integrated urban land use, transport, and energy planning, by reshaping urban form, help avoid urban sprawl, which is raising the cost of public service provision and locking in wasteful energy consumption in many Chinese cities. And in larger urban clusters, air quality management must operate at a regional scale to account for all relevant pollution sources in the airshed and identify cost-effective regional abatement plans. Beyond these cross-cutting issues, sustainable urbanization requires improvements in each sector. The reforms range from the mundane—such as better landfill management—to the monumental: an energy shift away from coal toward natural gas and a rising share of renewables. The priorities discussed in this report are specific to each sector, but the basic principle across all sectors is to limit environmentally harmful resource use as much as possible and then clean up what cannot be avoided. Resource use efficiency is thus the fi rst priority, all the more so because it also yields important co-benefits by raising productivity and promoting eco-


GREEN URBANIZATION

nomic growth. Energy intensity reductions during the 11th Five-Year Plan averted the use of 630 million tons of coal equivalent, or 1.46 billion tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Pollution control is closely linked with social development objectives. Achieving China’s new air quality standards in all cities would add millions of healthy life years for China’s urban residents. Some of the most important sectoral actions are as follows: • Encourage a greater shift from private to public urban transport by using price instruments and investments in better service, and reduce pollution by promoting cleaner vehicle technology, especially a shift to ultra-low-sulfur diesel and gasoline, and enforcing fuel quality standards. • To improve incentives and cost effectiveness in meeting the energy intensity reduction targets of industrial enterprises, rebalance regulatory and target-based approaches by introducing market-based policy tools such as tradable energy savings certificates. Further development of technical and financial services for energy efficiency, including deeper penetration of energy savings performance contracting, will also be helpful. • Lead by example by implementing aggressive efficiency programs for public buildings; establish targets for progressively tightening the energy efficiency code; and broaden the use of benchmarking for existing buildings. Promote green buildings by linking incentives with clearer labeling schemes while strengthening capacities across the supply chain. Phase out harmful construction materials to reduce indoor air pollution in buildings. • Secure cleaner urban energy sources by minimizing direct use of coal in cities through expanded access to piped natural gas—giving priority to households, commercial uses, and district heating—by removing pricing distortions, establishing a well-coordinated carbon pricing policy and restarting sector reforms that would establish a more even playing field for clean energy sources to contribute to urban energy supply. Continue to tighten power and heating emissions regulations.

• Ensure an efficient, safe, and secure water supply by reforming water rights systems, by using smart technologies to measure consumption, and by improving regional water resource and pollution discharge governance at the river basin and local levels. Expand use of payments for ecological services to address nonpoint source pollution challenges, and modernize urban water utility management. • Improve cost recovery in the solid waste sector to promote waste reduction, recycling, and safe disposal, including, in the medium term, life-cycle product stewardship programs. Improve planning of waste disposal with better environmental impact assessments. Improve waste disposal operations through reduced air and water pollution from incinerators and landfills and through proper closure, rehabilitation, and safe reclamation of old landfills. The task is urgent as the costs of growth mount and as citizens’ demands and expectations increasingly include a clean environment. The task is also challenging. No country in the world can claim to have achieved truly green growth, and those that are greenest took decades to get there. But the challenge also provides an opportunity. Stronger environmental actions will further encourage the shift toward cleaner economic activities— towards growth that is built not on energyand pollution-intensive low-margin production, but on services and higher-value-added manufacturing as countries such as Germany or Japan have done. Greener growth is a viable goal for China, as also argued by the Development Research Center of the State Council and the World Bank in China 2030 (World Bank–DRC 2013). Progress on reducing pollution will not be fast, and China’s current and future urban citizens will need some patience before their cities resemble their peers elsewhere that started this transition much earlier. But China has proven that it can implement major transformations more quickly than other countries, as the unprecedented scale and pace of its economic development shows. By continuing the tradition of adapting lessons from elsewhere to local needs and developing their own innovative

449


450

URBAN CHINA

solutions, China’s cities will become not just great places to make a living, but also great places to live.

The challenge of sustainable urban growth In 1997, a World Bank report titled “Clear Water, Blue Skies” reviewed China’s environmental challenges. Fifteen years later, its findings and recommendations sound strangely familiar. Looking at the 15 years before 1997, when China’s urban population grew from 191 million to 352 million people, the report documented high air and water pollution levels with large impacts on public health but also pointed to the many policy efforts under way to rein in pollution and the many successful initiatives for stabilizing or even reducing environmental problems such as urban air pollution. The report’s hopeful conclusion was that “new policies and careful investments made today [in 1997] mean that China’s children and grandchildren would also enjoy clear water and blue skies [by 2020]” (World Bank 1997, 3). This prospect still seems distant as China’s economic growth since the late 1990s exceeded not only the most optimistic expectations but also the capacity of environmental institutions to keep pollution and resource depletion in check. Some key challenges are the following: • The main source of air pollution in China comes from its dependence on coal for energy, and total energy use increased six times to fuel an economy that increased 18 times and meet the needs of a growing industrial sector and an urban population that more than doubled since 1978, when China began its economic reforms (Wang, Berrah, and Peng 2012). This growth in energy demand exceeded all expectations. By 2005, China had already almost reached energy consumption levels projected for 2020 in a joint DRC–Energy Research Institute (ERI) study published in 1999 (Berrah and others 2007). The share of coal in primary energy consumption has dropped from 78 percent in 1995 but remained at around 70 percent in 2011 (NBS 2012c). Emissions grew in parallel, although concerted efforts have been

made to control particulate matter (PM) and sulfur oxides (SOx), and mono-nitrogen oxides (NOx) emission standards for power plants were strengthened in 2012. Greenhouse gas emissions also grew. According to the International Energy Agency, China now accounts for about a quarter of global CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuel (IEA 2013a). Shanghai, Beijing, and Tianjin have estimated per capita emissions comparable to large European and even some North American cities (Sugar, Kennedy, and Leman 2012). • While air pollution has grabbed recent international headlines, China’s cities also face serious challenges in the quality and quantity of water. Nationwide, urban water supply falls short of demand by 6 billion cubic meters a year. The Ministry of Land Reclamation and Water Resources reports that 430 of 657 cities face water shortages; 110 of these had “severe” shortages (OECD 2009). The MEP reported 57 percent of the groundwater in 198 cities in 2012 was rated “bad” or “extremely bad,” while more than 30 percent of the country’s major rivers were found to be “polluted” or “seriously polluted,” making their waters unfit for drinking or direct human contact (MEP 2013).1 • Municipal and industrial solid waste generation increased from about 1.2 billion to 2.6 billion tons between 2003 and 2010 and is expected to double by 2030—challenging the waste management systems in many cities. Urban residents represent 53 percent of the population, but generate 80 percent of the total waste amount. As alarming as these trends are, there are some positive notes as well. The increase in energy consumption could have been much higher if it had paralleled economic growth, which averaged about 10 percent between 1990 and 2010. But China’s economy also became more efficient in using energy during this period, as energy intensity fell by an average of 4.7 percent a year (figure 7.1). This is an impressive achievement even though a full decoupling—with the economy continuing to grow while energy use and carbon emissions are held constant or decline—has not been attainable with such high economic growth


GREEN URBANIZATION

FIGURE 7.1 Fast economic growth outpaced improvements in efficiency

FIGURE 7.2 Air pollution declined over time and has recently been stable: PM10 concentrations 160

1000

120 Micrograms per m3

Index (1990 = 100)

140

100

100 80 60 40

10 1990

1995

2000

Economic growth Energy use

2010

20

CO2 emissions Energy intensity

0

2005

1997

2001

2005

2009 2011

Source: IEA, World Energy Statistics and Balances (database), doi:10.1787/data-00510-en. Note: CO2 = carbon dioxide.

Source: Renmin University 2013, based on China Environmental Yearbooks. Note: Data for 2000 and 2001 not comparable due to change in monitoring systems; m3 = cubic meters; PM = particulate matter.

rates. Second, the trend over the past years has been a reduction of average annual concentrations of PM10 (fine particulates with a diameter of 10 micrometers or less) despite the large increase in energy consumption (figure 7.2). Abatement policies have had an effect, although particulate matter concentrations in large cities remain unacceptably high. A third reason to be optimistic is that some experts expect a further slowing of energy consumption and resource use thanks to the restructuring of the economy. While still more is needed, a large share of the infrastructure to accommodate expected urban growth has been built, and more efficient technology is becoming more widely available—and is often produced—in China. These broader trends could provide a welcome tailwind for ambitious public policies aimed at greater resource efficiency and pollution abatement.

and infants, including higher rates of infant mortality, birth defects, and impaired cognitive functions (Currie and Neidell 2005; Currie and Vogl 2012; Padula and others 2013). Estimates of mortality from air pollution in China are staggeringly high. Despite falling average annual PM10 concentrations, impacts have been increasing, in large part because more people now live in cities. Two hundred million more urban residents were exposed to high air pollution levels in 2010 compared with the beginning of the decade. Estimated annual premature mortality from air pollution in Chinese cities increased from 418,000 to 514,000 between 2001 and 2010 despite a 25 percent reduction in average PM10 (Cheng and others 2013). The recent Global Burden of Disease update issued by the World Health Organization (WHO) presents an even higher estimate of 1.2 million premature deaths in China in 2010 (HEI 2013). 2 The impacts of water pollution are less well researched. Water pollution contributes to China’s rising cancer rates. Digestive cancers, for instance, increase by almost 10 percent with a onegrade deterioration of water quality (on a sixgrade scale) (Ebenstein 2012). These high mortality levels and other health damages have high economic costs. Because of differences in methodologies, esti-

The rising cost of environmental degradation These successes are no cause for complacency because environmental degradation continues to compromise social and economic development objectives. Understanding of the severe health impacts of air pollution is growing, especially the effects on small children

451


452

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 7.3 Estimates of the value of mortality and morbidity from air pollution 400 350

US$ (billions)

300 250 200 150 100 50 0 1975

1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

Matus and others (2012), including consumption losses Matus and others (2012), consistent with World Bank estimates World Bank (1997) World Bank (2011) World Bank and SEPA (2007) World Bank and DRC (2012)

Sources: Matus and others 2012; World Bank 1997, 2011a; World Bank–DRC 2013; World Bank and SEPA 2007.

mates of health damages from air pollution, for instance, vary considerably, from close to $100 billion to more than $300 billion a year (figure 7.3). New research also finds impacts on productivity, with workers in highly polluted areas being absent more frequently. A study in California even showed that pollution from urban areas has a significant impact on the productivity of farm workers in nearby rural areas (Graff Zivin and Neidell 2012). Stricter standards that lowered the average ozone level by 10 parts per billion were found to increase farm worker productivity by 5.5 percent, which could translate into $700 billion in benefits from higher productivity. Impacts could be even higher in China because of higher pollution levels. As a rising exporter of high-value farm products, both Chinese producers and their customers also have an interest in agriculture that is unaffected by pollution. Additionally, there is anecdotal evidence—supported by academic studies in other countries—that low environmental quality affects migration decisions and thus the competitiveness of polluted cities that may be less able to attract highly skilled workers and professionals. As incomes rise,

quality of life issues become more important, and people’s calls for a cleaner environment in China are growing louder. Premier Li Keqiang called for a more transparent government and increased public supervision to improve environmental compliance and warned that economic growth at the expense of the environment “won’t satisfy the people” (Kostka 2013). Better environmental quality will undoubtedly serve China’s people well. Practically all industrialized countries went through a phase of excessive pollution. Cities that have high environmental quality today suffered similar degradation decades ago (box 7.1). London’s “great smog” event in 1952 may have killed more than 10,000 people over four December days. Smog levels in Los Angeles are down 70 percent from the 1970s, and high ozone advisory days have dropped from 184 to close to zero. Tokyo’s campaign for cleaner air centered on the visibility of Mount Fuji. The mountain that can be seen on more than 130 days today could be seen on only 20 days a year in the 1960s. But there are some important distinctions in China’s experience. Given the size of China’s population and economy, its structure, and the speed of its development, the country’s environmental problems are larger than those experienced by other countries. But being a late developer also has advantages. China can benefit from the experiences of others and technology developed elsewhere and turn pollution curves around faster than was possible for earlier developers. Much of the research on air pollution sources, impacts, and abatement options was developed in North America and Europe over many decades and can be deployed more quickly and cheaply in China. Some of the benefits of technology and management are already apparent, and China has also produced indigenous solutions that can be shared with countries facing similar challenges today. More so than in many countries, green urbanization in China is in everyone’s interest. What happens in a Chinese city does not stay within administrative, regional, or even national borders. China is now the world’s largest emitter of CO2 , and air pollution from China frequently affects neighboring


453

GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7.1

Reducing severe air pollution in London and in Tokyo

In December 1952, London experienced an unusual cold spell, prompting greater than normal coal burning for heating. Although air pollution had been a problem for many years, from December 5 to December 9, London was covered by a thick blanket of what became known as the “Great Smog of ’52.” This event coincided with 4,500 more deaths than would normally have been expected. Later research estimated that almost three times as many fatalities could be attributed to persistently high air pollution during that winter. The dangers of low air quality were known to Londoners as early as 1661, when John Evelyn presented evidence to King Charles II that smoke polFIGURE B7.1.1

lution increases mortality. But it was not until the London smog incident that major pollution control legislation was passed, in the form of the Clean Air Act of 1956, which was subsequently expanded. Most importantly, the law regulated the use of domestic fires and encouraged the replacement of coal with natural gas or electricity for heating. Air pollution began a steady decline, even though London experienced another major smog event in December 1991 that caused about 160 deaths and could likely have been prevented by more ambitious air pollution policies. It was not until the mid-1990s that the United Kingdom adopted specific air quality standards in response to EU requirements (figure B7.1.1).

Air pollution concentrations in London and Tokyo, 1950–2013 b. Tokyo 450

400

400

350

350 Micrograms per m3

Micrograms per m3

a. London 450

300 250 200 150

300 250 200 150

100

100

50

50

0

0 1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

Sulphur dioxide

1960

2010

Black smoke

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

Suspended particulates

Source: Data provided by David Hutchinson (Urban Research) and Arata Ichihashi (Tokyo Metropolitan Government). Note: For Tokyo, particulates (or dust) for 1966-1983 were measured using a light scattering method. Data for 1984–2013 show suspended particulate matter (SPM) as measured by beta attenuation monitoring.

In Tokyo, every day since January of 1963, observers at the Seikei Meteorological Observatory have recorded whether they can see Japan’s highest mountain, Mount Fuji, 83 kilometers away. The 1960s were a period of fast industrial growth in Japan that came with an equally rapid increase of soot, dust, and sulfur oxides (SOx) in the air. While the government was initially slow to respond to severe air pollution, citizen groups soon demanded stronger action. Seeing Mount Fuji again, which in 1965 was possible on only 20 days, became a rallying cry for Tokyo residents. Public pressure was further fueled by a series of envi ron mental crises includ ing the 1970 “Yokkaichi Asthma” incident—an outbreak of

severe chronic pulmonary disease, emphysema, and asthma among residents near a large petrochemical complex in Mie Prefecture south of Kyoto. The government was fi nally compelled to issue a slew of environmental rules in a special legislative session that became known as the “Pollution Diet.” The new rules required factories to report their activities, strictly regulated industrial emissions, and, as transport emissions replaced those from manufacturing as the most important problem, imposed tight pollution regulations on vehicles. Air pollution dropped rapidly between the mid-1960s and 1970s. In 2011, observers at Seikei Observatory saw Mt. Fuji on a record number of 131 days.

Box sources: Ren 2000; Bell, Davis, and Fletcher 2004; Hutchinson and others 2004; Okubo 2013.


454

URBAN CHINA

Japan and the Republic of Korea and can be carried in the jet stream for thousands of miles. North America and Europe still exceed China’s cumulative historical greenhouse gas emissions, but, according to IEA data, China’s per capita CO2 emissions from fuel combustion of 5.4 tons in 2010 are still rising and are likely to reach the EU average by the middle of this decade (IEA 2013a, 2013c). Finally, in contrast to experience elsewhere, a large share of China’s pollution came initially from the expansion of dirty industries that were being phased out in developed countries. One estimate suggests that exports account for about one-third of China’s energy use, and likely a similar share of air pollution (Weber and others 2008). China’s export of CO2 emissions embedded in manufactured products has risen sharply in the 2000s (figure 7.4). This happened even as its manufacturing sector became cleaner simply because exports increased so much. On balance, these trends were probably beneficial to China and to its trade partners. Europe and North America were able to green their production and access low-cost goods, but at the cost of sometimes painful economic restructuring at home as dirty industries closed down. China’s industrializa-

tion helped lift hundreds of millions out of poverty, but at the cost of heavy pollution in its cities where the lower environmental standards at the time were among its comparative advantages. By shifting toward a growth model based more on services and consumption, China will be able to pollute less on behalf of other countries. On the other hand, global patterns appear to be replicated within China as coastal provinces have now become major importers of embedded CO2 from interior areas (Feng and others 2013). The past 15 years have yielded much better information about the sources and consequences of environmental problems in China. There have been promising developments, but excessive environmental burdens remain a major challenge. Much of what was written in the 1997 World Bank report could be written today. Will a report written 15 years from today be able to present a more positive appraisal? Much will depend on whether Chinese leaders can strengthen green governance to increase everyone’s incentives for more ambitious greening, and whether provincial and local decision makers can implement sustainable sector policies that align greening with social and economic objectives.

FIGURE 7.4 Global net transfers of CO2 emissions embedded in traded goods, 1991–2008 1,400 Tons of carbon dioxide (millions) Net importers Net exporters

1,200 1,000 800 600 400 200 0 –200 –400 –600 1991

1994

1997 China Japan

Source: Peters and others 2011.

Russian Federation German

2000 France United States

2003 United Kingdom Spain

2006

2008


GREEN URBANIZATION

Green governance must match China’s green ambitions China has one of the most comprehensive sets of environmental laws and regulations in the world. Since 1970, it has “enacted eight pollution control laws, 15 natural resources laws, over 50 environmental protection administrative regulations, over 200 departmental regulations and other regulatory documents, more than 1300 national environmental standards, more than 1600 local environmental regulations, and has approved and signed 51 multilateral international environmental treaties” (M. Zhang and B. Zhang 2012, 1). Yet, this growing body of laws and rules has not ensured environmental compliance by private and state-owned firms. Major pollution incidents are frequent, and persistent pollution continues to foul the air, land, and water in Chinese cities. How can China overcome this “paradox of advanced legislation and weak enforcement” (M. Zhang and B. Zhang 2012, 5)? Investments in specific sectors, discussed in later sections, will increase resource use efficiency and reduce pollution. But the technical know-how or even the financial resources for these investments are not the primary problem holding back green progress. The fundamental problem is inadequate green governance—the institutions, incentives, and instruments that enable effective environmental management. There are four main ways in which China can make environmental management more effective: • Increase resources: By international standards and given the size of the problem, China’s environmental management capacity is relatively small—especially at the national level—and environmental agencies often lack sufficient authority to enforce compliance. • Strengthen incentives: The current evaluation system for local officials, who are the primary authority for implementing environmental policies, puts insufficient weight on improvements in the quality of life of residents. • Open more channels for public participation: Citizens’ opportunities for contrib-

uting to the enforcement of green regulations, including those through the legal system, are still inadequate—in part because of limited access to information on the performance of environmental management authorities and the polluting activities of firms. • Employ sharper instruments: Reflecting a strong emphasis on technical expertise in government, regulations and target-based approaches dominate, while economic and market-based instruments that can sometimes be more efficient remain underused. Although governance is difficult to measure and formal evaluations are scarce, China has made progress in all of these areas. The government has announced increases in funding for pollution control. With rising incomes, local policies are shifting from a sole emphasis on growth to more balanced objectives. Individual citizens and organized groups are more and more active in environmental advocacy work, and initial steps have been taken toward full public disclosure of environmental information. And, finally, price instruments and market-based mechanisms such as pilot carbon markets play an increasing role in promoting resources conservation and pollution control. Yet, as this chapter shows, in all of these areas more progress is possible.

Greater resources for effective environmental management Achieving China’s green goals requires stronger institutions responsible for designing and enforcing environmental rules. Government spending on environmental protection has been around 1 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) (World Bank–DRC 2013). That is similar to average GDP shares for public spending on the environment in countries belonging to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), although EU levels are at about 1.9 percent when including expenditures by government-controlled environmental agencies such as water treatment plants.3 China’s current expenditures represent an increase from the past, and, in response to recent pollution

455


456

URBAN CHINA

problems, the government announced additional resources. Required initial spending to adequately address China’s environmental problems is estimated at 0.5 percent of GDP above current levels (World Bank–DRC 2013). Conservative estimates put annual damages from environmental degradation at 3.5 percent of GDP in 2010, according to the Chinese Academy of Environmental Planning.4 The lack of sufficient resources is reflected in lower staffing levels at China’s national environmental institutions. The Ministry of Environmental Protection has about 400 staff in Beijing, about 2,000 in affiliated institutions (shiye danwei) and 500 in five regional offices. 5 Compare that to the more than 17,000 who work at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, two-thirds of whom are based in regional offices. MEP, serving a population that is four times larger and arguably facing more severe challenges, has fewer resources available for centralized environmental management functions such as national collection and dissemination of data, research, policy and regulatory development, and supervision of large polluters than its North American or European counterparts. Provincial and local environmental management is the responsibility of the environmental protection bureaus (EPBs), whose staff numbers increased from 105,900 in 1998 to 166,800 in 2005 (Li and Higgins 2013, 412) and about 192,000 today.6 While notionally partly accountable to MEP, EPBs mainly report to local governments and are dependent on them for funding and promotions. Local EPB budgets vary by region. In poorer parts of the country, budgets tend to be small, leading to staff shortages, lack of inspection and testing equipment, and inadequate skill development. Some EPBs located in regions experiencing rapid economic growth have not received funding increases that match their expanded obligations. For instance, Kunshan City in Suzhou municipality in Jiangsu had a level of economic development in 2011 that was much higher than that of several of the poorer provinces in China, yet Kunshan’s administrative status remained that of a county (Chien 2013; Kostka 2013). This “big foot in a small

shoe” (dajiao chuan xiaoxie) problem has sometimes adversely affected the work of the EPB. EPBs in these fast-growing urban areas complained that allocated resources and their rank did not match the higher workload. Some local governments and EPB leaders have tried to overcome inadequate budgets for environmental or restructuring projects by using debt fi nancing or land sales, as has been the case in Datong City in Shanxi (Eaton and Kostka 2013). Inadequate funding means that local-level staff and managers often lack sufficient qualifications and training opportunities to cope with rising challenges. Furthermore, because of the current government officials’ selection and appointment practice, only a quarter of EPB directors came from within the EPB system (figure 7.5) EPBs also often depend on fines collected from polluters for funding. In one EPB in Central China, only 24 of 157 employees were covered by central government funding; the remaining 133 were supported by pollution fees.7 Among six surveyed counties in Henan Province in 2009, 79 percent of staff were paid from fines paid by local firms. When the EPB staff’s “daily bread comes from pollution fees,” as one county EPB director put it, they have no incentive to increase fines to a level that would exceed damages or compliance costs and cause firms to stop polluting. It is not clear whether these reports are isolated cases or form a widespread pattern,8 but they do imply that the FIGURE 7.5 Only a quarter of provincial EPB directors came from within the organization Others Within the EPB

6% Municipal mayor or Party secretary

26% 32%

13%

23%

Party function committee Source: Kostka 2013. Note: EPB = environmental protection bureau.

From another provincial department


GREEN URBANIZATION

steady flow of fines may lead to overstaffing of some local bureaus without increasing their effectiveness. In addition, pollution fi nes and collection rates are generally low, and penalties do not generally increase for repeated violations (Economy 2010). That is in contrast to the U.S. Clean Water Act, for example, under which daily penalties can be imposed on noncompliant polluters. Besides lack of funding, environmental management agencies in China also do not have sufficient authority to enforce regulations. Provincial EPBs have the authority to impose “regional investment restrictions” by holding up environmental approvals of new projects. But because EPBs report to provincial and local governments, local officials can override environmental concerns when they confl ict with other objectives. Because EPBs rank relatively low in the administrative hierarchy, leaders of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) that operate nationally or internationally often outrank those who supervise their environmental compliance— a constraint often referred to as the “central SOE problem.” Especially where an SOE or even a private fi rm dominates a local econ-

BOX 7.2

omy, local leaders have few means and little incentive to enforce regulations. In fact, where one or a few large fi rms dominate a municipality, there tends to be less disclosure of environmental information, especially if the dominant fi rms are in heavily polluting industries (Lorentzen, Landry, and Yasuda 2014). Enforcement authority varies among other agencies responsible for attaining environmental objectives.9 For example, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), which is responsible for energy efficiency, has relatively strong influence through investments and financing. Local water and resource bureaus, which monitor surface water quality, on the other hand, have fewer enforcement tools. One such municipal bureau in Hunan Province was not only unable to penalize fi rms that violated water consumption regulations, it could not even obtain value-added figures for local firms from the statistical bureau to estimate their water consumption (Kostka 2014). Recently there have been some hopeful signs that strong leadership at EPBs are able to address some of these problems even if the low fi nes remain an ineffective deterrent (box 7.2).

Addressing the “central SOE problem”

In June 2013, the local environmental protection bureau (EPB) of Anqing Municipality in Anhui charged the central state-owned enterprise (SOE) Sinopec Anqing with a RMB 90,000 fi ne for polluting the air. The fi ne was triggered by a production accident that in May 2013 caused black smoke to leak from Sinopec’s production facilities. The fine was one of the first of its kind, because local EPBs usually have no authority to charge pollution fees to central SOEs. Often managers of local branches of central SOEs also hold concurrent posts within the locality; the general manager of Sinopec Anqing, for instance, is concurrently also a member of the Anqing Municipal Standing Committee, a powerful position in the locality. The Anqing case could be a signal to other local EPBs to be bolder in addressing the “yangqi [central state-owned enterprise] problem.” However, the RMB 90,000 fi ne is relatively low for a central SOE and does not fully reflect the considerable local Source: Kostka 2013.

ecological and health damage resulting from Sinopec’s pollution. Two factors help to explain why the municipal EPB in Anqing dared to fine the central SOE: • Public monitoring was an important stimulus: After the accident in May 2013, many citizens in Anqing complained about the pollution and posted pictures to the Internet. • Strong EPB leadership arose: In early 2013, Anqing Municipality assigned a high-ranked local leader—a former vice mayor—to lead the municipal EPB. The new leader frequently visited the provincial EPB bureau and MEP to gain upper-level government support. The local EPB head’s high ranking together with the support from national level made charging the new fee possible.

457


458

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7.3

The three baos of data reporting

Shortage of advanced monitoring equipment at the local level hinders the verification of environmental outcomes. The verification of environmental targets differs depending on available technologies and forms of monitoring systems. For chemical oxygen demand (COD), a measure of water quality, and SO2 targets, monitors are installed in larger companies. This monitoring equipment is often not very technically advanced, is unreliable, and is limited in number (Kostka 2014). For energy intensity targets, no purpose-built monitoring equipment is in place, and reports rely on self-reported figures from enterprises. Self-reported online data are sent to the local statistical bureau, which then collates sheets of data. Only data from very large enterprises are shared directly with the provincial and national statistical bureaus. A government official explains: Enterprises report their energy consumption through an online reporting system. Self-reporting by enterprises is problematic,

because there are three kinds of bao [reporting]. There is luanbao, which refers to messy data that [lack] logic. Often accountants enter the data into the online sheets but they lack training on energy bookkeeping, so they often make mistakes. There is manbao, which refers to companies underreporting production figures because they fear that this information is shared with the local taxation bureau. Because companies are afraid that they would have to pay more taxes, they do not report real production numbers. Finally, there is tuobao, where companies simply delay reports. Because the self-reported data from enterprises collected by the statistical bureau are so poor, one official admitted that he collects his own data from the town level, including data for both large and smaller enterprises. According to him, his independently collected data are more accurate, but for official purposes, he still has to use the data from the statistical bureau.

Source: Kostka 2013.

Strengthening the capacity of institutions for environmental management should also include improvements in the collection and wide dissemination of relevant data. Much progress has recently been made in collecting air quality data, including the recent establishment and real time release of monitoring data for PM 2.5 (very fi ne particulates with a diameter of 2.5 micrometers or less) in 74 cities. MEP plans to expand this system to more than 300 prefecturelevel cities. But monitoring networks for many environmental indicators are still sparse. Provincial EPBs, but no local EPBs, are able to assess the 106 indicators defi ned in the new water quality standards (Qu and others 2012). Reporting protocols for environmental performance data are not very rigorous, allowing local institutions too much flexibility in what and how they report (box 7.3). In response to recent environmental crises China’s government has announced new fi nancial resources for mitigating pollution

problems. Some of those resources could be allocated to strengthen the policy development and enforcement capacity of MEP and its affiliated institutes. At the local level, additional resources in capacity and technology for monitoring will also be needed. Additional administrative changes could disconnect the funding for local EPBs from the collection of pollution fees, but without removing the incentive to go after polluters. Fines and pollution fees can be an important source of funding for environmental management, but, as in most countries, revenue should flow into general budgets from which EPBs would then be financed. A more difficult problem will be to make local EPBs more independent, especially in enforcement action, without reducing the responsibility of local governments for environmental outcomes. That may require stronger oversight and performance monitoring from provincial and national authorities, combined with better incentives for local officials and greater scope for public participation.


GREEN URBANIZATION

Stronger incentives for local governments The disconnect between the national government’s environmental goals and local implementation is also a reflection of insufficient incentives for local governments to improve environmental outcomes and for firms to reduce resource consumption and avoid pollution. Local government officials who do not see sufficient benefits or penalties for environmental performance will focus on other priorities. National directives and local priorities continue to encourage a dominant concern for economic growth targets over social and environmental objectives. As one local leader said: “It is like a constrained maximization problem (youyue shue de jidahua): We try to maximize GDP and fiscal income, but we meet only the bare minimum of environmental standards. This is of course not always efficient for the environment” (Kostka 2013). Such attitudes are reinforced by promotion criteria that put relatively little weight on environmental quality achievements. This system is formalized in the government’s performance assessment system, which gives different weights to targets in the cadre evaluation forms (kaohebiao). Economic targets tend to overshadow social and environmental targets. In one Shanxi county 2011 evaluation form, government officials could reach up to 28 points for meeting economic targets, 19 points for improving people’s lives, 11 points for social development, 14 points for resources and environment, and 13 points for social safety (Eaton and Kostka 2013). Environmental goals thus accounted for, at most, 16 percent of the total performance score. Consequently, one EPB official said: “Environmental and energy targets are binding targets but they are not our ultimate targets. No leader will be promoted because of their better achievements in environmental protection and energy savings. GDP growth is still the target that we work hardest to achieve” (Kostka 2013). A recent statistical analysis confi rms that environmental improvements are uncorrelated with probability of promotion, while spending on transport, for instance, promotes GDP growth and thus career advancement (Wu and others 2013). Given the long list

of central government directives, local leaders therefore act rationally by investing their time and resources in other objectives that are more likely to advance their career. This pattern will not change unless promotion criteria are revised and penalties for nonachievement increased. The relatively short tenure of local cadres also reduces their incentive to invest in environmental projects whose benefits may only be apparent after some years. Nominally 5 years, the average tenure of local mayors and party secretaries has dropped from 4.2 years in the 1993–2001 period to 3.3 years during 2002–11 (Kostka and Yu 2014). Provincial DRC heads stay an average of 3.6 years and provincial EPB directors 4 years. While there are some advantages of periodic turnover to bring in fresh ideas, short tenure times encourage a focus on projects with short-term results that increase promotion odds rather than on more complex restructuring or pollution mitigation efforts whose benefits are in the future and that may be stopped by one’s successor (Eaton and Kostka 2014). Extended tenures would encourage long-term thinking and more emphasis on quality of life issues in evaluation systems. Xiaoyi in the coal country of northern Shanxi province turned itself into an attractive place to live under the leadership of a locally rooted group of policy makers who built constructive relationships with residents and local industry (box 7.4). Further reducing the effectiveness of environmental policy implementation is that local decision makers frequently concentrate on the appearance of environmental gains rather than on cost-effective greening. In selecting environmental investments, many local leaders thus favor “political accomplishment projects” (zhengji gongcheng) over more efficient solutions. In Shandong Province, one county plans to build water treatment plants in each town to show progress in implementing the 12th Five-Year Plan, rather than upgrade a centralized larger plant more cheaply (Kostka 2013). There are some signs that these problems are being addressed. Promotion criteria have begun to change, and Zheng and others (2013) fi nd that this is having an impact on local policy makers’ environmental achieve-

459


460

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7.4

Co-opting local businesses into green growth in Xiaoyi

Xiaoyi County in northern Shanxi effectively managed to co-opt local businesses into sharing the burdens of green growth and economic restructuring. Xiaoyi is a resource-based economy with an undiversified, coal-dependent industrial structure in the midst of transformation. Leaders in Xiaoyi’s leadership group have cooperated closely with local businesses to share the burden of reducing Xiaoyi’s coal dependence. Strikingly, local coal enterprises, many of which are privately owned, have actually been given soft targets in local plans for investment in economic transformation projects: “Coal production enterprises should each launch non-coal projects of between one and two billion RMB; each coking enterprise should launch projects of one billion RMB or more in non-coal or downstream processing projects.” (Xiaoyi Government Work Report 2011, 20). In addition, Xiaoyi leaders have effectively bundled coal restructuring with the goal of developing noncoal industries by providing incentives for former coal bosses whose enterprises were eliminated as part of a 2006 industry clean-up to start greener businesses. For instance, with government backing, a former mine owner whose enterprise was shuttered brought a Walmart outlet to Xiaoyi and also has a new business marketing agricultural products.

Xiaoyi’s greening growth strategy has built up gradually with guidance from a strong and locally rooted leadership group. Recent party secretaries in Xiaoyi have served for an average of 8.3 years and mayors an average 6.2 years, much longer than the average tenure of local leaders of three to four years. A unique characteristic of Xiaoyi is that leaders from elsewhere put down roots in Xiaoyi: “Most of the Party secretaries, mayors and CCP Organization Department heads are from outside. But they all settle down here.” The attractiveness of Xiaoyi as a place to live (good primary and secondary schools, high environmental quality, and a developed entertainment industry) does seem to have contributed to its success. Living environment is often cited as an important factor in luring investors, but the example of Xiaoyi shows that it also may be important in attracting and retaining able government leaders. This continuity helped Xiaoyi’s leadership group make very effective use of the relationships it has built over time with local industry. Leadership continuity likely contributed to the leaders’ success in securing investment because investors could be confident that plans would not shift radically with personnel changes in the leadership group.

Source: Kostka 2013.

ments, especially in cities where mayors have better education levels. China’s government can accelerate this process by further reforming the reward and incentive system for local officials. Together with increasing public involvement (discussed in the next section), stronger incentives will put pressure from two directions on local officials to improve environmental performance.

More channels for public participation In practically all industrial countries, environmental management has become stricter over time largely as a response to vocal public demand for better protection from pollution and for a higher quality of life. China is no exception. As incomes and access to information increase, public pressure on polluters directly and on governments charged with environmental management will con-

tinue to grow. Public participation—whether by individuals, by grass-roots initiatives, or by well-organized NGOs—plays a vital and constructive role that complements official efforts but does not replace it. The public’s concern often focuses on visible problems such as air pollution, while less visible or long-term problems such as sporadic toxic releases or soil contamination can be just as bad or even more dangerous. Most people also react most to problems in their own backyard (although NGOs tend to have a broader perspective). So the problems identified by well-educated people, who are often more vocal and well connected, might receive a disproportionate amount of attention. Public participation is therefore no substitute for the government’s investment in environmental monitoring and enforcement. Yet, public participation will be an important factor in the success of China’s efforts


GREEN URBANIZATION

to improve the environment. Citizens can currently have influence through three main channels: the consultation process that is part of the environmental impact assessment of large public and private projects, various public complaint mechanisms, and the legal system. For these channels to be effective and efficient, citizens must have access to credible and up-to-date information about pollution and emissions from companies. Progress on public disclosure of such information has been made in some parts of China, but information release is still too much up to the discretion of firms and local officials. As in other countries, NGOs play an important role in facilitating public participation in China (Kostka 2013). There are an estimated 1,000 registered environmental NGOs (or ENGOs) and an equal number of unregistered ones. Those that have been most influential have often been closely associated with governmental organizations (government-organized NGOs, or GONGOs). They can more easily bridge the gap between civil society and the state but have sometimes been criticized for not being as forceful in pursuing environmental objectives as more independent ENGOs, who still often run into the limits of what the government considers an acceptable role for NGOs (Hildebrandt 2011; Wu 2013). ENGOs could become more effective in helping achieve China’s green goals if they had more opportunities to participate in policy design and formulation and not just implementation. ENGOs are far more influential in China’s large international cities, especially Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. Officials in other parts of China too often see them as adversaries rather than as stakeholders, which limits their role, for instance, in environmental education, advocacy, and monitoring of environmental compliance. ENGOs can also play an important role in promoting sustainable lifestyles—an essential task for China to build up awareness and support for green actions and to build a market to demand greener products.

Environmental impact assessments The earliest mechanism for the public to provide input to environmental decision making was through participation in environmental

impact assessments (EIAs), which were fi rst introduced in China in 1973 (M. Zhang and others 2012). The guiding concept for EIAs is the “three simultaneities”: any major project should anticipate adverse impacts on the environment by designing, constructing and operating protective measures during the project cycle. By the 1990s, EIAs for international cooperation projects started to include public consultation. In 2003, the Environmental Impact Assessment Law specifically stated that if a project involves the environmental interests of the general public, inputs from stakeholders, experts, and the general public need to be collected. EIAs have become one of the main instruments for environmental protection. They have been effective in significantly modifying or preventing some projects that could have caused large environmental damages, including the Panyu Waste Incineration Project or the ShanghaiHangzhou Maglev train line (Zhao 2010). But there are weaknesses both in the EIA implementations generally and in their participatory components. EIA compliance is mandatory only for a relatively small number of projects and often weakly enforced. Large companies sometimes fail to perform EIAs, instead paying relatively modest fines. In soliciting inputs from the public, EIAs often pick an unrepresentative sample of respondents and allow public comments for only a short period early in the process when the full implications of the project are not yet clear. There is often too little opportunity for face-to-face consultation. Recently, the central government has endorsed a strengthening of public participation in EIAs. What would help most would be a shift in the mindset of local officials about the value of the public’s feedback, more rigorous methodologies for questionnaire design and feedback collection, and clearer operational rules for public participation throughout the project cycle (Li, Ng, and Skitmore 2012). Formal complaint systems. As early as the 1990s. some city governments had established formal channels through which residents could complain about environmental violations. Many provinces and cities have established 24-hour hotlines that allow citizens to register environmental complaints.

461


462

URBAN CHINA

Citizens also can complain directly to local EPBs, which received over 700,000 complaints in 2010. With rising access to social media—42 percent of Chinese are now connected to the Internet—some local governments have begun using such channels that allow for broader information distribution and feedback collection. The Chengdu EPB, for instance, assigned staff to set up a microblog for citizen outreach and information dissemination. By documenting and publicizing local environmental problems, citizen groups can be effective partners of the government in pursuit of shared environmental goals. As the example in a previous section showed, in May 2013, public monitoring helped encourage Anqing Municipality in Anhui Province to impose a fine on the production facility of a large SOE after a pollution incident. Formal complaint systems thus complement the efforts of local agencies, which usually do not have the resources to monitor compliance of numerous potential polluters. The question is how efficient and effective complaints are. There are many examples of polluters being caught who would not have been detected by the EPB. But the costs of a complaint system can be high, because many complaints are about minor nuisances. Improving formal monitoring aided by more complete pollution registries could prevent many complaints in the first place. Despite the large number of complaints, relatively few trigger enforcement actions. Between 2006 and 2010, MEP received 300,000 environmental complaints.10 These led to a re-examination of 2,614 administrative decisions. Only 980 of these were administrative court cases, and only 30 resulted in criminal cases, suggesting that few environmental conflicts are resolved through the legal system. Greater public participation in detecting and publicizing environmental wrongdoing—whether through formal channels or informally—will be an effective means to support the government’s environmental goals only if there is an outlet for such protests. Otherwise they can lead to social instability. One such outlet is the legal system where citizens, community groups or local governments could initiate cases of gross violation of environmental laws.

Legal system. Most national and local environmental agencies around the world have limited enforcement capacity. Ministries of Environment typically have much smaller budgets than other departments. Enforcement of environmental rules in Europe or North America—but also in Brazil, India, or Thailand, for instance—therefore relies substantially on the court system. A famous example is the role of courts in enforcing air quality standards in Delhi in 2001 (Bell and others 2004). Successful lawsuits by individuals affected by pollution in China have resulted in compensation payments in some instances. In one prominent ongoing case, a chemical plant in Yunnan released 5,000 tons of chromium dregs into the Nanpan River in 2011. A group of NGOs filed a public interest lawsuit on behalf of thousands of affected farmers that could become a landmark case if it is recognized by the Supreme People’s Court as a precedent. Overall, however, pursuing polluters through the legal system is still difficult, and many cases never reach trial stage (Stern 2011). China has for some time been experimenting with specialized environmental courts. By mid-2012, almost 100 such courts and tribunals had been established in 16 provinces of China (Zhang and Bao 2012). Such courts could provide an effective way of assisting more direct government efforts in enforcing environmental laws if a number of problems with existing environmental courts are resolved. The main issue is that there are high barriers to bringing cases to court. Less than 1 percent of environmental disputes reach the court system (Stern 2011), in part because only few organizations can file public interest environmental law suits. Revisions to China’s environmental law proposed in July 2013 would further restrict the right to fi le such suits to only one MEP-affi liated organization—the All-China Environment Federation.11 Barriers also exist where judges close to local governments prevent individuals or groups of affected citizens trying to bring cases to court from going forward (Zhang and Bao 2012). The resulting small number of environmental cases has been used as


GREEN URBANIZATION

a reason to close environmental courts. A more certain legal basis for these courts and greater independent procedures would help overcome these problems. The legal system can be a slow and expensive way to resolve environmental disputes. More comprehensive enforcement of environmental laws and mediation or conflict resolution by public or nonstate organizations should play an important role and usually be the first best option. But, as experience in other countries has shown (for example, Lin and others 2009), for complex cases or where officials are unable or unwilling to pursue polluters, stronger environmental courts will be an important means to hold polluters to account.

BOX 7.5

Public disclosure Public pressure on polluters can be an effective way to encourage greater environmental compliance. But citizens often do not realize that a facility is polluting air, water, or soils until harmful effects are obvious. Disclosure of polluting behavior by fi rms gives people the information they need to assess whether they are affected. China has experimented with public disclosure of pollution performance ratings since the 1990s (Wang, Wheeler, and Jin 2010). Piloted in Zhenjian (Jiangsu Province, box 7.5) and Hohhot (Inner Mongolia) by MEP’s predecessor organization, SEPA, together with the World

Environmental performance ratings in Jiangsu Province

Despite long-standing efforts to control pollution with traditional regulatory instruments, China continues to have severe pollution problems. Environmental performance rating and public disclosure (PRPD) has emerged as a complement for traditional pollution regulation. It helps overcome institutional weaknesses that hinder conventional monitoring and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and standards, and lowers regulatory costs. In the past decade, Jiangsu and several other areas in China have practiced the PRPD approach and have found it an effective pollution control instrument. Jiangsu started its PRPD program with support from the World Bank in 2001, after a pilot test in Zhenjiang Municipality. The program rates firms’ environmental performance from best to worst in five colors—green for superior performance; blue for full compliance; yellow for meeting major compliance standards but violating some minor requirements; red for violating important standards; and black for more extreme noncompliance. The primary benchmarks for ratings are China’s emission and discharge standards that specify effluent concentration limits. The rating system also incorporates other performance indicators, including hazardous waste disposal practices, solid waste recycling, pollution accidents, public complaints, internal management requirements, China cleaner production certificates, ISO 14000 certificates, administrative penalties, and other citations for illegal Source: Jin, Wang, and Wheeler 2010.

activity. For each indicator, the system specifies a clear, unambiguous, and publicly available link to ratings. Evidence for the PRPD program in Jiangsu Province indicates both increasing participation by fi rms and improvement in their compliance rates. The number of rated fi rms increased more than twentyfold in 10 years, from 1,059 in 2001 to 20,261 in 2010. The percentage of firms with positive ratings increased to 96 percent in 2010. Research has found that PRPD program in Jiangsu has significantly reduced pollution from rated firms, with particularly strong impacts on firms with poor ratings. PRPD has significantly increased market and stakeholder pressure on managers to improve their fi rms’ environmental performance. Firms with better ratings perceive positive impacts on market competitiveness, overall market value, and relationships with different stakeholders, while the fi rms with bad ratings are more likely to perceive deterioration. Recently, Jiangsu Province has linked the environmental performance ratings to eligibility for bank loans, the market list inspections requirement, and the environmental responsibility insurance premium, among other things. All fi rms’ environmental performance information has been posted on the province’s intranet, which is accessible to all local environmental officers. It is expected that stronger incentives will be generated for fi rms to further reduce pollution with the PRPD program in Jiangsu Province in the future.

463


464

URBAN CHINA

Bank, such initiatives have now been implemented in the Yangtze River delta (Jiangsu, Shanghai, Zhejiang), Hunan, Hebei, Anhui, Guangdong, Shanxi, Shenyang of Liaoning, Shenzhen, Chongqing, Ningxia, and soon Hubei. These systems summarize and publicize firms’ environmental compliance information into a color-coded ranking from excellent to severe underperformance, essentially shaming persistent polluters and rewarding clean production. Social pressure can be effective, and many companies will voluntarily seek improvements. But such systems will work only in cities with an environmentally proactive government, which are usually already better performing places with higher incomes. Although decentralized, this approach again requires the voluntary support of a central (provincial or municipal) authority (Economy 2010). The system also still will need to be backed up by comprehensive monitoring and strong enforcement, which has been uneven in China—better in coastal areas and in areas with a more diverse economy (and therefore less susceptible to capture by dominant firms), where enforcement capacity is greater, and where there are a larger number of complaints, which highlights the role of public participation (van Rooij and Lo 2010). As part of China’s Open Government Information initiative in 2008, MEP introduced an Open Environmental Information (OEI) regulation. It requires disclosure of environmental information including the allocation of emissions quotas, pollution fees collected, outcomes of investigations, and lists of violators of environmental rules. These measures are an important step in moving from voluntary public disclosure schemes toward more formalized attempts to introduce greater transparency in environmental performance. The regulation still has some shortcomings. First, in contrast to most other such regulations, China’s OEI makes the government, rather than industry, responsible for disclosure. The toxic release inventory in the United States and the European Pollutant Emission Register in contrast make it mandatory for companies to report emissions above a threshold. Furthermore,

there are seven types of exceptions that Chinese environment management officials can invoke to refuse release of information, such as state or commercial secrets or information that could endanger public security or social stability. These exceptions make it too easy to suppress information about pollution that is of public interest. Second, as a general set of regulations aimed at improving governance, OEI does not convey a right to disclosure. Given China’s decentralized environmental administration, that means that the most polluted municipalities have the weakest disclosure (Tan 2012). There is even some evidence of backsliding. The Institute of Public Policy and Environmental Affairs, which annually ranks 113 cities by their environmental transparency, found that about 40 cities had lower disclosure performance in 2012 than a year earlier.12 And third, implementation of OEI is quite expensive for environmental authorities and will require further large investments in technology. MEP, for instance, receives “a flood of requests,” as one official put it, and does not have the staff and resources to respond to all. The government still acts as a gatekeeper for environmental compliance information. Some municipalities have made significant efforts to open up environmental information. Jiangsu Province has become a national model for public disclosure.13 Hunan Province’s publicizing of persistent polluters shamed one company into immediately investing in cleaning up production. And Zhejiang Province is the fi rst in China to require fi rms to publicly release their pollution data. The current system gives a lot of leeway to individual provinces, which encourages experimentation. Over time, this should lead to mandatory policies that require municipalities in all parts of China to collect and disclose high-quality pollution monitoring data and information about government enforcement. This kind of disclosure will be an important step toward a system where local authorities—with the help of the public—monitor the compliance of firms and prosecute violators, and where provincial governments and MEP, in turn, monitor the


465

GREEN URBANIZATION

Sharper policy instruments As in other areas of policy making, governments have three types of instruments available to promote environmental objectives. They can use price instruments such as taxes, fees, or subsidies. They can pass regulations such as technology or emission standards. And they can spend resources on things like research, information programs (Annex 7A), or transfers to compensate those affected by other policies. All three types of instruments are necessary, although the efficiency with which they achieve their policy goal can vary. Price instruments, if they are designed to ensure economically efficient resource use, tend to be the most efficient. But they are often not enough to trigger the desired response such as a certain level of energy savings. So additional instruments may be required to address separate market, information, or behavioral failures. Governments should be careful when adding additional instruments, however. Too often, overlapping instruments cancel out each other, create new market distortions, or create confusing and inefficient signals to firms and households. A simple principle is that each problem or market failure should be addressed by a separate instrument. In practice, policies do interact and need to be taken into account when introducing new instruments. The following sections briefly discuss the three main types of instruments—prices, regulations, and investments and transfers.

Prices Besides reforming institutions for environmental management in China, the most effective way to induce greater resource efficiency and lower pollution is through prices. China has removed the most egregious distortions and subsidies in the energy sector—the source of most air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. Prices for coal, electricity, some petroleum products, and natural gas generally reflect financial costs over the long

run, and some are at or even above international market levels. Coal prices. Coal prices paid by industrial consumers have been relatively high compared with prices in other countries. Over the past year, the benchmark spot price for thermal coal traded at China’s northern ports has remained well above that of similar-grade coal produced in South Africa, Indonesia, and Australia (figure 7.6). Domestically produced hard coking coal has generally been up to 20 percent more expensive than in the United States between 2009 and 2012, in part because of high transport and handling fees that can make up to 70 percent of the industrial consumer price in coastal areas. Environmental taxes and fees have also increased. Publicly traded coal mining companies in China paid around RMB 140 ($22) in taxes per ton of coal produced in 2012 (RMB 110 or $17 per ton excluding income taxes).14 A 2013 review by China’s Central University of Finance and Economics found 25 different environmental resource taxes and fees among the 109 taxes and fees currently levied on coal producers.15 Prices will FIGURE 7.6 Border spot prices for thermal coal traded in China and other countries, 2012–13 110 100 US$ per ton

environmental management performance of municipalities.

90 80 70 60 Oct

Nov 2012

Dec

Jan

Feb

Mar 2013

Apr

May

Chinese northern ports (FOB, 5,500 kcal/kg) Durban, South Africa (FOB, 6,000 kcal/kg) Newcastle, Australia (FOB, 5,500 kcal/kg) Kalimantan, Indonesia (FOB, 5,900 kcal/kg) Source: China Coal Industry Association data. Note: Free-on-board (FOB) prices, expressed in U.S. dollars at monthly market exchange rates. Kcal/kg = kilocalories per kilogram.


466

URBAN CHINA

rise further as tonnage-based resource taxes are converted to value-based resource taxes.

vary between $0.08 and $0.10, lower than in many industrial country cities (figure 7.7).

Electricity prices. Electricity prices in China overall are now generally comparable to longrun marginal supply costs (before accounting for environmental damage and other nonmonetized costs) (Moskovitz and others 2007; Zhang 2012). Industrial users pay around RMB 0.70 ($0.10) per kilowatt hour on average. By comparison, the average rate for industrial users in the OECD countries in 2010 was $0.11 per kilowatt hour (IEA 2013b). Taken on a purchasing power parity basis, China’s effective average rate for industrial users is about $0.17, which would place it in the middle of the pack among the OECD countries. Urban residential prices

Oil and gas prices. NDRC, which regulates petroleum prices, has used international oil prices as the benchmark for domestic prices since 2009, although with a break on cost increases. If benchmark prices exceeded $130 a barrel, then “on principle of maintaining economic stability,” diesel and gasoline prices are not raised or are raised only by a small margin (Xinhua 2009). Taxes now make up more than 35 percent of retail gasoline and diesel prices in China,16 compared with 13 percent in the United States and 47 percent in the European Union. Gasoline and diesel prices are higher today than in Russia or the United States, although still much lower than in Europe (figure 7.8). New rules introduced by the NDRC in March 2013 have allowed petroleum prices to be adjusted more frequently to follow movements in benchmark prices more closely (NDRC 2013). Natural gas prices are also closely regulated by pricing authorities. Prices for industrial users in major Chinese cities are relatively high, especially at purchasing power parity prices (figure 7.9). Prices for fertilizer producers and urban residents are typically set 30–35 percent lower than those for industry. Although energy prices generally reflect production and supply costs and are close to or sometimes even exceed global price levels, some government policies cause some prices to deviate from market costs and encourage inefficient energy consumption. The most important of these is the continued favorable pricing policies, sometimes cross subsidies, for residential energy prices through higher tariffs for industrial users. One study estimates that in 2007, overall electricity subsidies were RMB 76.4 billion ($10.1 billion, 2007 prices) (Lin and Jiang 2011). While the residential sector received an estimated RMB 202.6 billion in net subsidies, the industrial and commercial sectors combined overpaid (had a negative net subsidy) by an estimated RMB 126.2 billion. In industrial countries residential tariffs are usually higher, reflecting higher distribution costs. Cross-subsidies have social objectives. They follow the prin-

FIGURE 7.7 Residential electricity prices of 10 cities in China compared with other major cities, 2011–12 Copenhagen, Denmark Berlin, Germany Melbourne, Australia Tokyo, Japan Sydney, Australia New York City, United States Paris, France Săo Paulo, Brazil Toronto, Canada Los Angeles, United States Seoul, Korea, Rep. Guangzhou Shenzhen Dongguan Wuhan Shanghai Hangzhou Chongqing Chengdu Tianjin Beijing

39.61

10.14

7.64 0

10

20

30

40

50

US ¢ per kwh China cities

Major cities throughout the world

Source: China Electricity Council data; E-Control and VaasaETT (2012), “Household Energy Price Index for Europe” media releases, http://www.energypriceindex.com (accessed June 2013); U.S. EIA, Form EIA-826 detailed data, http://www.eia.gov/electricity/data /eia826/ (accessed June 2013); Tokyo Electric Power Company (2012), “Press Release (May 11, 2012) Regarding Electricity Rate Increase”, http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com /release/2012/1204304_1870.html (accessed June 2013); Kepco, electricity rates calculator, http://cyber.kepco.co.kr/kepco/EN/F/B/ENFBPP002.do?menuCd=EN060202 (accessed June 2013); Ausgrid, 2012, “Residential Electricity Prices and Energy Bills 2011/2012—Sydney vs Melbourne,” http://www.ausgrid.com.au/Common/About-us/Newsroom/ (accessed June 2013). Note: Prices for China’s cities are for 2011; data for other cities are for 2012.


GREEN URBANIZATION

FIGURE 7.8 China’s transport fuel prices are still relatively low but have increased significantly b. Gasoline prices

a. Diesel prices Turkey United Kingdom Germany France Korea, Rep. Japan Australia South Africa China United States Brazil Russian Federation India

Turkey United Kingdom Germany France Korea, Rep. Japan Australia South Africa China United States Brazil Russian Federation India 0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

0

2.5

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

US$ per liter

US$ per liter 2012 prices

1995 prices

Source: GIZ 2013.

FIGURE 7.9 Natural gas prices paid by industrial end-users in Chinese cities compared to prices in other countries, 2000–11 a. Market exchange rates

b. Purchasing power parity 1.2

5

1.0 US$ (PPP) per m3

6

RMB m3

4 3 2 1

0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2

0

0 2000

2005 Korea, Rep.

2011 China

Japan

2000 United States

2005

2011

United Kingdom

Source: NBS 2005d–2012d; U.S. EIA, US Price of Natural Gas Delivered to Residential Customers, http://www.eia.gov/dnav/ng/hist/n3010us3m .htm (accessed December 2013); Korea Energy Economics Institute, Energy Info.Korea 2012, http://www.keei.re.kr/main.nsf/index_en.html (accessed December 2012); UK DECC, Table 5.7.1 Industrial gas prices in the EU and the G7 countries, https://www.gov.uk/government /statistical-data-sets/international-industrial-energy-prices (accessed December 2013). Note: Chinese data represent prices paid by sample of industries in 36 large cities; data for Korea, Japan, the United States, and the United Kingdom are national averages of urban consumers; data include all taxes, surcharges, and other fees.

ciple of “equal burden sharing,” where price setting considers affordability and social concerns in addition to supply costs. But they come at the cost of lower economic efficiency.

Furthermore, they tend to be regressive because wealthier households, who consume disproportionately more energy, receive the largest share of the benefit.

467


468

URBAN CHINA

Other distortions include pricing practices that prevent electricity producers and some other energy suppliers from passing input costs above a certain level on to consumers. The difference between market-based import prices for natural gas and regulated domestic prices have generated large losses for importers. In 2011, for example, PetroChina lost RMB 21.4 billion on sales of pipeline gas imported from Turkmenistan because of price regulation. Such losses have dampened incentives to boost supplies of this relatively cleaner fuel. As pricing reform continues, better information about the size, fiscal costs, and distributional impacts of distortions in resource prices would provide greater momentum for reform and a better basis for deciding which policies, on balance, are justified when economic, social, and environmental considerations are taken into account. Such a review could take the form of an inventory or audit of environmentally harmful policies similar to those performed by some European environmental agencies (UBA 2011, for example). Getting to cost recovery levels is only the first step. China’s coal, electricity, and gasoline pricing policies have also begun to account for damages caused by resource production and consumption—local pollution that harms people’s health and greenhouse gas pollution that fuels global warming. Adding such “external” or “social” costs is usually the most efficient way to change the behavior of people and fi rms. Determining the appropriate pollution charges can be difficult, however. Estimated health impacts or climate change impact modeling can provide guidance. One large U.S. study for instance, estimated that the health damages from fossil fuel power plants range from 0.002 to 0.12 cents per kilowatt house depending on the size and age of the plant (NRC 2010). A study by Chinese experts estimated that adding a comprehensive estimate of the social cost of coal—including indirect costs from mining, transport, production, and emissions—would raise the market price of coal by 23.1 percent (Mao, Sheng, and Yang 2008). The social cost of climate change damages from energy use are more difficult to determine, because of uncertainty about specific impacts. The

U.S. government recently revised its official estimates of the social cost of carbon upward based on extensive modeling—to $38 per ton of carbon dioxide for the year 2015.17 This number is used to estimate the climate benefits of environmental rule making. Such extra charges are imposed in two ways. One is through an energy or resource tax. Ecological tax reforms would put a charge on energy or water use to encourage conservation. Carbon taxes specifically charge greenhouse gas emissions (box 7.6). Charges could rise over time in line with efficiency improvements and become a new source of revenue, which can be earmarked for related goals, such as funding energy efficiency investments, or they can reduce other distorting taxes such as those on labor or replace municipal revenue from land sales. The alternative policy is a cap-and-trade system. This system establishes a clear limitation on pollution and lets a market for emission allowances determine the price for pollution, ensuring that pollution reductions occur where they can be achieved at least cost. Allowances have been initially distributed freely to make the system acceptable to firms, which if possible should be avoided. They can be auctioned off to raise revenue similar to a tax. Revenues from a tax or cap-and-trade allocation auctions can be reinvested in further resource savings or emission reduction, contributing to higher benefits than the price effect alone. Pollution trading systems in China have been piloted for sulfur dioxide (SO2) and carbon, and in several countries they are also used for water pollution (FisherVanden and Olmstead 2013). The following sections on sector priorities discuss the use of some price instruments in China in more detail. Several policies and pilots introducing environmental taxation and cap-and-trade systems are already under way in China. These will be useful as a way to collect information and experiences but will need to be expanded nationally if they are to become truly effective. Furthermore, cap-and-trade systems need to be frequently recalibrated. An economic slump will reduce emissions or pollution even without firms’ efforts, adding to the frequent problem of initially overallocating allowances. In addi-


469

GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7.6

China 2030: Estimated impacts of carbon pricing

According to a recent analysis by the World Bank and DRC, a price of $10–$20 on a ton of carbon dioxide (CO2) (RMB 83–166 in 2004 prices) starting in 2015 would effectively bend the curve of China’s rising greenhouse gas emissions, causing emissions to plateau or peak before 2030. Total coal use would peak in or around 2020. The price would effectively be equal to a tax on steam coal of about $22–$44

a ton. While carbon pricing would have a dramatic effect on CO2 emissions and the use of dirty fossil fuels, it would only have a modest long-run effect on economic output (figure B7.6.1). Even with a carbon price of $20 a ton, average annual growth in GDP slows by only 0.06 percent between 2015 and 2020 and 0.05 percent between 2025 and 2030 compared with a baseline scenario.

FIGURE B7.6.1 Effect of a carbon price on emissions and economic growth b. Effect on economic growth 3.4

11

3.2 Coal, tons (billions)

CO2 emitted, tons (billions)

a. Effect on emissions

12

10 9 8

3.0 2.8 2.6 2.4

7

2.2

6 2010

2015

2020 Business as usual

2025

2030

2011

Carbon price of US$10 per tCO2

2015

2020

2025

Carbon price of US$20 per tCO2

Source: World Bank background analysis done for World Bank–DRC 2013.

tion, complementary energy efficiency and renewable energy policies may “loosen” the cap and add to a surplus of allowances, dragging down CO2 prices, as seen in the EU carbon trading system (Grubb 2012). As China moves from pilot schemes to full deployment, these interactions among overlapping policy instruments need to be dealt with based on careful analysis with a coordinated effort between ministries and agencies.

Regulations Price incentives are an efficient and noncoercive way to encourage changes in behavior, but there remains an essential role for strict environmental regulations as well as for social transfers. Price instruments can be blunted by behavioral factors such as short-

termism (people look at the higher purchase price of energy-efficient light bulbs but ignore their long-term savings) or split-incentives (a landlord may not make energy saving upgrades as long as the tenant pays the utility bills). Regulations can also be more effective when the need to stop or reduce a harmful activity is urgency. But regulation is only as good as its enforcement. China’s current reliance on target-based regulations is producing desirable results but may lead to unintended consequences and weaker compliance incentives. The regulations are often rigid and may not reflect local environmental conditions and priorities, often lack a scientific basis, are sometimes arbitrarily exaggerated as they pass through the administrative hierarchy, and compliance is difficult to verify (Kostka 2013). More rigorous technical, social, and

2030


URBAN CHINA

economic analysis of regulatory decisions and investment projects could make them more effective.

Investments and transfers Besides influencing prices and issuing regulations, governments also spend money directly to pursue greening, for example, by funding information programs, training, or upgrading public infrastructure. In some instances, such direct government expenditures can help buffer the unintended consequences of environmental policies. Market instruments are economically efficient, and complementary regulations are effective where markets do not work well. But both usually raise prices for resources, at least in the short term, which can affect the competitiveness of firms and the welfare of low-income households. For environmental policies to be efficient, effective, and fair, assistance to households and companies will sometimes be necessary. For instance, household expenditure shares for energy in two of China’s provinces, Liaoning and Sichuan, range from about 2 percent for the richest households in Sichuan to just over 10 percent for the poorest in Liaoning (figure 7.10 shows expenditures are higher in Liaoning because of winter heating needs). Wealthier households usually have

higher total energy expenditures, but the expenditures account for a smaller share of their income. An international benchmark for energy poverty is when households have to spend more than 10 percent of their income on energy. If energy prices rise by 15 percent when cross-subsidies are removed or an ecological tax is imposed, up to 20 percent of households in Liaoning could fall above that threshold. This example illustrates that the social consequences of sustainability policies need to be studied carefully, but it does not argue against raising prices to market or even to social cost levels. A block tariff that maintains a lower price for a minimum amount of energy is one option to address social concerns, as already implemented for electricity. But, if the block is not well designed, it can have significant benefit leakage to the nonpoor. Generally, rather than keeping energy prices low across the board, which would discourage energy efficiency efforts by households, a more effective strategy is to complement sustainability policies with targeted sector and social protection policies that help the poorest cope with energy price rises (Ruggeri Laderchi, Olivier, and Trimble 2013). Local officials in China already have extensive powers to force the shutdown of inefficient or outdated production capacity for which energy efficiency upgrades would

FIGURE 7.10 Household energy expenditure shares, 2012

Home energy use as share of household expenditures (%)

470

12 10 8 6 4 2 0 V1 V2 (poorest)

V3

V4

V5

V6

V7

V8

V9 V10 V11 V12 V13 V14 V15 V16 V17 V18 V19 V20 Average (richest) Vigintile Liaoning

Source: China Household Income and Expenditure Survey data. Note: Vigintile = one-twentieth or each 5 percent increment.

Sichuan


GREEN URBANIZATION

not be sufficient. To soften the blow to local employment and economic output, city governments may provide reemployment assistance to displaced workers, financing for affected enterprises to pursue other lines of business, and partial compensation for retired equipment (Kostka and Hobbs 2012; Li and others 2009; Taylor and others 2010).

Sustainable sector policies are closely aligned with green objectives Differing resource endowments, economic structures, climactic conditions, and other conditions mean there can be no universal definition of a green city. Because the specific issues that need to be addressed in these sectors vary widely, and because sector reforms have advanced more in some sectors than in others, no generic set of options or recommendations can be applied. But there are a number of common themes. First, action in all sectors is urgently needed because of the immediate health and ecosystems impacts from high pollution and because poorly designed urban infrastructure investments during the next wave of urbanization could lock China into further cycles of unsustainable development. Second, problems of the magnitude and complexity faced by China’s urban policy makers cannot be solved in sector silos or geographic niches. Land management, transport, building, and public service sectors need to be closely coordinated to shape cities that are resource efficient and low polluting while also promoting economic efficiency and quality of life. And because air pollutants travel over long distances, air quality management needs to be organized at a geographic scale that matches the footprint of the problem. Third, reducing local pollution (immediate benefits) and global carbon pollution (with most benefits in the future) often go hand in hand. Increasing energy efficiency, by reducing fossil-fuel burning, can save lives that would be lost to air pollution today and will also help reduce future global warming. But end-of-pipe abatement technologies for power plants and cars, for instance, can

reduce air pollution concentrations but will not capture carbon emissions. As a rule of thumb, when retrofitting existing infrastructure, it will often be most cost-effective to prioritize local pollution reductions because they bring important, near-term benefits to local populations. For new investments, low-carbon designs will be easier and often cheaper to incorporate at the beginning than retrofitting these assets later, so both objectives can be considered at a lower life-cycle cost. Assessment tools are available that evaluate both local and global emissions, and these should be developed further to optimize solutions based on local circumstances (annex 7B). Sector investments and policies should seek to limit environmentally harmful resource use as much as possible and clean up what cannot be avoided. Table 7.1 presents the main messages for each sector.

Crossing jurisdictions for effective air quality management Recent episodes of severe air pollution in many cities have brought air quality into the center of environmental policy debates in China. There is a growing realization of the scope and scale of health impacts from polluted air, and the government has demonstrated its willingness to use its fi nancial and administrative resources to address this problem more forcefully. Improving air quality in China’s cities is a massive challenge not only because of the scale of the problem but also because the large number of pollution sources, and chemical reactions between different pollutants, make it particularly complex. Some of the key elements of an effective air quality action plan are addressed here. Three principles for policy making stand out. One is that adopting a more flexible approach for setting targets for air quality management (AQM) within China’s National Ambient Air Quality Standards (CNAAQS) could facilitate implementation by accounting for the currently very large differences in pollution levels and conditions across cities and regions. A second point is that regional institutions for AQM must be endowed with greater authority, because air pollution travels across municipal boundaries and solutions

471


472

URBAN CHINA

TABLE 7.1 Sector priorities for green urbanization Integrated approaches to resource use efficiency and pollution management Promote resource efficiency by revising statutory urban planning rules and coordinating urban and sector planning more closely.

Implement regional air quality management based on sound monitoring, comprehensive technical assessment, and economic analysis.

Providing sustainable and safe urban transportation Reduce reliance on private cars by charging the full cost that their use imposes and by making urban public transit and nonmotorized transport more attractive.

Enforce fuel quality standards, continue to tighten and enforce vehicle emission standards, expand low-emission and alternative fuel vehicles, and encourage retirement of older, highly polluting vehicles.

Meeting urban energy needs by prioritizing efficiency and greening the energy mix Rebalancing markets and mandates to reduce energy use in industry Rebalance administrative measures with more market-based approaches that motivate enterprises to prioritize energy efficiency as part of their own business interest; maintain enterprise obligations while providing more options, like trading, to meet targets; and strengthen local government capacity in regulatory supervision and policy implementation.

Strengthen development of energy-efficiency services industries, giving enterprises increased access to technical services and financing, and promote deeper penetration of energy savings performance contracting.

Leading by doing: serving the people in more efficient and cleaner buildings Lead by example with aggressive building efficiency programs in public institutions.

Phase out harmful construction materials to reduce indoor air pollution.

Establish targets for progressively tightening energy efficiency codes to set clear market signals; broaden use of benchmarking for existing buildings as basis for retrofit policies and programs; promote green buildings by linking incentives with clearer labeling schemes and strengthening capacities across the supply chain. Securing clean energy sources Minimize the direct use of coal in cities by expanding access to piped gas (with priorities given to households, commercial uses, and district heating) and clean energy sources.

Establish a more even playing field for cleaner energy to contribute to urban energy supply by removing pricing distortions and by improving efficiency of energy supply systems through increased competition and modernization of sector regulation.

Integrating water resources and pollution management to improve water quality Ensure a efficient, safe, and secure water supply by reforming the water rights system, using smart technologies to measure consumption, and enhancing water resource and pollution discharge governance at the basin level and at local levels; broaden use of payments for ecological services to address nonpoint source pollution challenges; and increase public awareness through new means like water footprint accounting.

Modernize urban utility management by reforming water pricing to improve sustainability of water and wastewater treatment services; strengthen governance by piloting mechanisms like water boards in metropolitan areas and aggregating services in small towns, adopting transitional arrangements for meeting wastewater standards for weaker cities to help improve coverage.

Improving solid waste management: waste reduction, recycling and disposal Charge waste removal fees that can fund more efficient collection, separation, and disposal of waste, and encourage life-cycle product stewardship programs that help avoid waste generation.

Improve the planning of waste disposal by strengthening environmental impact assessments, improve their operations by reducing air and water pollution from incinerators and landfills, and provide for the proper closure, rehabilitation and safe reclamation of old landfills.

can be cost-effective only when applied at a larger scale beyond the jurisdiction of each city and province. Third, spending resources for air pollution mitigation wisely requires a comprehensive, multipollutant approach that identifies those policies and interventions that

provide the largest pollution reductions at the lowest cost. This strategy also includes the identification of abatement options that result in both local air pollution and climate change reduction (co-benefits). Specific abatement actions will occur at the sector level. Because


GREEN URBANIZATION

of the cross-sectoral nature of the air pollution problem, an effective institutional and regulatory framework is critically important. Urban air quality has gradually improved as prevention and control policies have been successively tightened (World Bank–MEP 2012). The annual average concentration of relatively coarse particulate matter (PM10) for 113 priority cities fell by about 40 percent, from 145 to 83 micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3) between 1997 and 2012. SO2 emissions have been declining since the late 1990s and particularly since the mid-2000s, mainly because of the wide application of flue-gas desulfurization at power plants (Lu and others 2010). Overall, NO2 emissions have also showed a decreasing trend over the past 15 years, although this trend has leveled off in recent years most likely because of the increasing vehicle fleet in Chinese urban areas (Nygard and Deichmann 2013). Much progress has also been made in collecting and disseminating information on urban air pollution. A nationwide monitoring program for fi ne particulate matter (PM 2.5) initially covered 74 cities. China’s Center for Environmental Monitoring now provides hourly updates of air quality for about 175 cities on the web, with plans to expand the program to all 325 prefecture-level cities.

Despite these positive trends, air pollution levels remain high. Average PM10 concentrations in 2012 are still more than 20 percent higher than the new Class II rating under CNAAQS and 325 percent higher than the WHO preferred standard of 20 µg/m3. Moreover, these averages mask far higher levels in individual cities and city clusters, especially in the North China plain including the Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei (Jingjinji) region (figure 7.11). Furthermore, data for the fi rst half of 2013 suggest that PM concentrations may have increased, with PM 2.5 levels about twice the Class II standard and seven times the WHO standard of 10 µg/m 3. PM 2.5 is of great concern because these very small particles can enter deep into the cardiovascular and respiratory systems, causing high morbidity and mortality. Overall, the newly available monitoring data suggest that PM10 concentrations appear substantially higher than earlier reported. The Jingjinji region experienced severe pollution, where even healthy people should avoid outdoor activities, on 48 days during the first half of 2013. While cities in West and North China once had the highest PM10 concentrations, the new PM 2.5 and ozone (O3) data indicate that the centers of heavy air pollution are now in the industrial centers in the North China Plain.

FIGURE 7.11 PM10 and PM2.5 monitoring results from 74 pilot cities, including 3 regions, 2009–13 Former PM10 monitoring

New PM10 and PM2.5 monitoring (from 2013)

250 PM2.5

PM10

μg/m3

200 150 100 50 0 2009

2010

Jingjinji CNAAQS (2012) new class II

2011

2013

2013

Yangtze Total 74 cities Pearl CNAAQS (1996, 2012) class I WHO recommended

Source: Calculations based on Renmin University 2013, World Bank–MEP 2012, and CNEMC 2013. Note: Since the 2013 figures are for the first half year only, both the standards and the concentrations levels are illustrated in dotted lines and bars.

473


474

URBAN CHINA

Unless the patterns found in early 2013 are due to unusual circumstances, it seems unrealistic for many cities to achieve CNAAQS Class II standards as intended by 2016.

China’s air pollution problem may be getting more complex The causes of these unexpected spikes in air pollution are still debated, and they may well be temporary. But air pollution problems will remain challenging for a number of reasons that also have a bearing on possible mitigation strategies. First, the composition of pollution sources in China’s cities is gradually changing. It is also highly variable, because China’s cities have different geography, industrial structure, and energy supply patterns. Far too few rigorous and comparable pollutant source apportionment studies have been done for Chinese cities. Overall, coal combustion—in power plants, industry, and residential use—remains an important contributor to China’s air pollution, especially in winter, where it can account for as much as 60 percent of PM10. The share of emissions from vehicles is rising. Although new cars are cleaner, the volume of new vehicles is very large and vehicular emissions can account for as much as 30 percent of PM 2.5. Natural

sources in the form of dust worsen air pollution problems, especially in the North, where seasonally and during severe dust storms they can make up to 60 percent of PM10 in some cities, including Beijing (table 7.2). The continued uncertainty about pollution sources and the dynamic nature of source compositions show the need for a much better understanding of where air pollution comes from. Second, the way in which particulates form is growing more complex, with the share of so-called “secondary pollutants” increasing. This is the share of fi ne particulates such as PM 2.5 that forms in the air when gases such as sulfur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen oxides (NO x), and ammonia (NH 3) react chemically. Most SO2 comes from coal combustion, while most NOx is emitted by vehicles. Ammonia is an important precursor. In fact, such chemical reactions are facilitated by cold temperatures such as those that the Jingjinji region experienced in early 2013 during the spike in PM 2.5 concentrations.18 Over the North China Plain, most ammonia comes from agricultural activities—nitrogen fertilization (54 percent) and livestock emissions (46 percent; see Zhang and others 2012). Ammonia emissions have increased rapidly over the past twenty years. Because ammonia emissions worsen the impact of gaseous emis-

TABLE 7.2 Breakdown of PM10 and PM2.5 sources nationwide and in Beijing PM10 % share

Sources

Suspended dust

PM2.5 % share Nationwide

Beijing

30–60 (North) 5–30 (South)

34 (North) 29 (South)

17 (suspended) 7 (construction)

Coal combustion

20–60 (Winter) 5–20 (Summer)

10–30 (within city only)

16.7 within city 24.5 outside city

Industrial processes (iron steel, cement dust)

Up to 20

Up to 32 (mainly cement)

5–20

15 (North) 20 (South)

22

Up to 10

14 (North) 20 (South)

9

20–40 (largely PM2.5)

10–57 (from SO2, NOX, NH3)

40-50% (from SO2, NOX, NH3)

Vehicle emission

Biomass burning Secondary PM (Beijing, Yangtze, Pearl River)

Source: World Bank–MEP 2012, 11; Nygard and Deichmann 2013; Yang and others 2012; Lei and others 2011.


GREEN URBANIZATION

sions from fossil-fuel burning by helping to create more PM 2.5, reducing them will also lessen the impact of emissions from energy generation and use. That will require halting the considerable overapplication of fertilizer (Liu, X., and others 2013) and introducing better livestock management. The complexity is further increased by the need to also consider greenhouse gas emissions. Air pollution abatement often can yield significant CO2 reductions as a co-benefit (Liu, F., and others 2013) and also reduces short-lived climate pollutants, of which black carbon is of particular importance. Because pollutants from different sources interact in complex ways, it is important to address pollution from all sources—that is, a multipollutant approach that also considers carbon pollution—rather than focus on one in particular. The third aspect is the role of longdistance transport of air pollutants. Dust and particulates produced in one province can reach cities in a neighboring province. Emissions caused by agricultural activities in distant rural areas can worsen urban pollution problems. As a result, already high pollution levels may become even more severe by events or actions that take place far away from the area of impact. In the Jingjinji region, Hebei accounts for as much as 89 percent of the industrial PM emissions and 81 percent of the SO2 emissions, while Beijing accounts for only 4 percent and 6 percent, respectively (Xinhua 2013). Similarly, in the lower Yangtze River Delta, 84 percent of industrial PM and SO2 originate in the neighboring Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces, while 16 percent of the emissions originate in Shanghai city. Long distance transport of pollutants implies that air quality management cannot only be done on city-by-city level but rather must be planned and implemented at a closely integrated regional scale (for example, in a regional “airshed”) that brings local urban and regional AQM together. Finally, an emerging question is whether climate change could have an impact on local air pollution levels. One well-understood aspect is that the higher temperatures expected with global warming facilitate the formation of ozone, which can harm the respiratory system and lead to asthma,

bronchitis, and premature death. A less researched aspect is arctic amplification that can cause greater swings and a slowing down of the jet stream (Francis and Vavrus 2012; Nygard and Deichmann 2013). Weather systems may remain in place longer, leading to a greater accumulation of pollutants. The possible role of climate change highlights the fact that uncertainty is likely to increase, so our assumptions must be continuously updated.

Strengthening air quality management Many parts of China’s air pollution control policies have worked well. For instance, the amended air quality law of 2000 focused control efforts on 113 priority cities with the greatest air pollution problems. These cities significantly reduced PM10 concentrations over the following decade. Lessons learned should now benefit all of China’s cities that face air quality challenges. A comprehensive air quality improvement strategy needs to address three important aspects. Different cities face very different challenges in meeting China’s ambient air quality standards, and these differences should be reflected in the prescribed implementation schedule for pollution reduction policies. The standards establish a uniform target air quality level for all cities under the principle that all of China’s urban residents should be able to enjoy clean air as soon as possible. But cities have very different pollution levels that arise from industrial structure, natural conditions, and capacity to implement mitigation policies. A uniform path to compliance is therefore unrealistic and probably counterproductive. A more differentiated set of target dates, with intermediate targets for the most polluted cities, can make achievement more manageable while still retaining the incentives for already-cleaner cities to reach targets faster or to overcomply, for instance by pursuing the stricter WHO standards. Because air pollution travels across administrative boundaries, control programs must be organized regionally. Much of the air pollution in many of China’s cities originates from areas that are beyond the control of city governments—from other urban centers but also from nearby agricultural areas. Purely

475


476

URBAN CHINA

local abatement action will not be sufficient to clean the air, especially in larger city clusters. Other global metropolitan areas with historically large pollution problems have set up powerful regional AQM authorities. In the United States, the South Coast Air Quality District is in charge of air quality planning, regulation, compliance assistance, enforcement, monitoring, technology advancement, and public education for the greater Los Angeles region in California, home to 17 million people. And the Ruhr area in Germany established a regional AQM strategy (Luftreinhalteplan Ruhrgebiet) that coordinates abatement measures across 13 individual cities such as Essen and Dortmund. Such models could be adapted to strengthen regional institutions in Chinese city regions with severe air quality problems such as Jingjinji. To be effective, such regional institutions or similarly effective mechanisms need to be endowed with a clear mandate and legal authority across municipal boundaries, together with strong enforcement mechanisms, which in most countries leverage the legal system. A clear coordination mechanism also is needed covering the many municipal sector and environmental management bureaus whose actions affect air quality. Air quality action plans need to be guided by a comprehensive and rigorous analysis of the costs and benefits of abatement options. In response to recent severe air pollution incidents in China, the government has announced large additional air pollution control efforts, including a RMB 1.7 trillion program to be implemented over 2013–17 (Xinhua 2013). To ensure that such funds are well spent, a solid technical and economic analysis should identify the most cost-effective abatement strategies. The approaches need to be both broader—by considering pollution sources and impacts in a larger geographic region—and deeper—by employing much finer-grained data on individual pollution sources and exposed populations. These are common in North America and Europe, and Chinese researchers and policy analysts also have the expertise to implement them. A comprehensive, integrated AQM approach involves four major steps (figure 7.12; see also box 7.7).

FIGURE 7.12 Framework for comprehensive integrated air quality management

Emission from pollution sources

Monitoring Dispersion modeling

Air pollution concentrations

Exposure

Optimized abatement strategy

Abatement options Cost-benefit analysis

Impacts and damages

Source: Nygard and Deichmann 2013.

The first step is the identification of emission sources, including their geographic location, by conducting a detailed inventory and analysis of emission sources, both stationary ones such as power plants and nonstationary ones such as vehicles. In the second step, a combination of ground-monitoring data and atmospheric dispersion modeling determines air pollution concentration levels in all parts of the area. In a regional application, this step will involve a hierarchically structured set of models with fine resolution local models nesting into coarser resolution regional or even national models.19 In the Jingjinji region, for example, the overall regional level could be covered by 50-by-50 kilometer grids at a coarser resolution in an overall 700-by700 kilometer coverage, while 14 urban areas would be covered by finer resolution grids of 1–5 kilometers within the 50-by-50 kilometer coverages (figure 7.13). The resulting information can then be used to predict how pollution concentrations in individual locations change with the introduction of very specific abatement measures, even at individual facilities. In principle, this procedure allows design of abatement options to achieve specific air quality targets at the level of individual monitoring stations. The third step translates observed and modeled air pollution concentrations into impacts by estimating who is exposed to how


GREEN URBANIZATION

477

BOX 7.7 The call for integrated, multipollutant approaches to air quality management in the United States An extensive review by the National Research Council of air quality management (AQM) in the United States since introduction of the Clean Air Act in 1978 concluded that further improvements would require “an integrated multi-pollutant approach to controlling emissions of pollutants posing the most significant risks” (NRC Committee 2004). The council advised that such approaches should seek opportunities for addressing air pollution and climate change mitigation simultaneously. Recent research has highlighted the importance of short-lived climate pollutants such as black carbon that are also reduced through measures that target

PM 2.5. Since the council’s review, states and local governments have passed laws requiring multipollutant AQM planning that takes greenhouse gases into account. States can also save money and achieve air quality targets more effectively if control measures for traditional pollutants, such as NOx and SO2 , are integrated with required CO2 reductions (James and Schulz 2011). As China embarks on more aggressive pollution controls and decarbonization efforts, such integrated, multipollutant approaches can identify cost effective pathways that lead to significant emission reductions in local and global greenhouse gas emissions.

Source: NRC Committee 2004; James and Schulz 2011.

much air pollution and then applying socalled dose-response functions, which link pollution levels to health outcomes including premature death. In an urban context, the impacts on human health are most important, but other impacts include diminished visibility, corrosion, or cleaning needs. In a broader context, impacts on natural ecosystems through eutrophication or acid rain as well as long-term climate change impacts, for example, should also be considered. Comparison of current impacts with those modeled under various abatement scenarios provides measures of benefit (avoided damages). If the abatement option is an efficiency measure, additional co-benefits could also include energy or other resource material savings. In the final step, these benefits are compared with abatement costs. Going through this process for various abatement options identifies the most cost- effective air pollution control strategy, for instance in the form of a marginal abatement cost curve that ranks policies or investments according to their damage reduction per unit of expenditure. An effective tool is to present the abatement options on maps and show how much air pollution concentrations will be reduced in separate sections of the city. Given the recent spikes in air pollution in many Chinese cities, it is easy to forget that

FIGURE 7.13 Example of a nested modeling system of air quality in the Jingjinji region in China

Source: Nygard and Deichmann 2013. Note: See text for explanation.

air quality today is better than a decade or two ago. With rising wealth, expectations for quality of life increase, and China’s urban residents today value clean air more. China can leverage experience and technology from elsewhere and mobilize significant domestic expertise and resources to tackle the urban air pollution problem. But international experience also shows that quick improvements


478

URBAN CHINA

Shaping urban energy and infrastructure needs through urban form and planning The urban form—a city’s spatial development—will shape China’s urban energy and infrastructure needs and thus heavily determines their environmental impacts.20 Urban form strongly influences city infrastructure and in turn the behaviors of city dwellers. Because of its multisector nature, urban form is a key lever for strategies to improve resource efficiency and to maximize use of renewable resources. Urban form, once established, is very difficult to change. Urban infrastructure embeds a path dependency, possibly for generations—it establishes the way people travel and live, encouraging a lifestyle that is hard to change after people grow accustomed to it. Yet it is still possible to change mobility choices and the sizing and scaling of street patterns that meet the needs of all users, both motorized and nonmotorized (Ollivier and others 2013).

FIGURE 7.14 Potential of redensification in the densest 600 km2 in Guangzhou, compared to Seoul

Density (inhabitants/km2)

40,000

Guangzhou

30,000

20,000

Seoul, Korea, Rep.

10,000

0 0

100

200

300

400

Built–up area (km2) Source: Salat 2013.

500

600

FIGURE 7.15 Water network length and urban density 7 Water network (m per capita)

are unlikely. Heavily polluted cities in Europe and the United States reduced pollution levels by well over 90 percent from their peak, but it often took several decades of determined policy implementation. China can achieve its goals faster, but blue skies will not come overnight.

6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

Urban density (inhabitants per km2)

Source: Adapted from Müller and others 2013. Note: This and subsequent figures map a set of cities worldwide to illustrate the relationship between density and water and transport networks. The green line corresponds to the current average urban density levels in Chinese cities. The red line illustrates urban sprawl impacts. The green arrow illustrates the path efficiency from denser urban development.

China has the world’s largest urban population, but, surprisingly, its cities are not particularly densely settled. Guangzhou for example, could increase its population in the densest 600 square kilometers by 70 percent, or 4.2 million people, if it raised its density to the level that prevails in Seoul (figure 7.14). Similarly, Shenzhen could increase its population in the densest 600 square kilometers by 98 percent. Population densities are also less uniform in Chinese cities. Densities of neighborhoods vary by a factor of 10 in the Paris and New York metropolitan areas but densities of some neighborhoods of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and most other large Chinese cities are as much as 20 times greater than other neighborhoods in the same city. Urban sprawl—with rapid growth of low-density areas at the urban periphery— increases resource use in three general ways. First, low-density development increases fuel consumption in urban transport through longer commutes and more private motorized trips. Second, low-density areas increase living space per person, and consequently lead to higher per capita energy use for home heating, cooling, and general power consumption. Third, low-density development produces infrastructure used less intensively than that in dense urban cores, lowering economies of


GREEN URBANIZATION

Road network (m per capita)

12 10 8 6 4 2 0 0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

Urban density (inhabitants per km2)

Source: Adapted from MĂźller and others 2013.

scale (figure 7.15; figure 7.16) and increasing the capital, operation, and maintenance costs for infrastructure services. Globally, efficient urban forms are quite diverse because the relationship between end users and the urban fabric is complex. There is no ideal urban form that can be copied from place to place. However, there are characteristics common to most efficient cities that typify outcomes of good urban planning practices. First, while efficient urban forms vary in scale and density, compact urban forms make it easier to support public transport; generate lower demands for energy, water, material and waste; and limit encroachment on farmland and natural areas. Second, efficient urban forms mix different uses with housing to provide shops, services, and employment nearby, reducing the need for a car. Third, efficient urban forms stand out as high-quality places to live and offer a diversity of interactions among residents and businesses that fosters innovation. As urban form locks in a path dependency, it locks out options for greener urbanization. For instance, studies have shown that a 10 percent increase in density reduces transportation energy consumption much more in already denser urban areas than in less dense ones, because the relationship between transportation and density is nonlinear (Porter and others 2013). Transit-oriented development, an energy-efficient option for cities, is generally not practical or economically viable

in low-density suburban areas (figure 7.18). Unbalanced metropolitan areas, with dense urban cores and an extended low-density periphery induce greater commuting flows from the periphery to the center. As a result, both transit capacity and road networks must be oversized to accommodate peak loads during rush hour. The resulting congestion of the street network is responsible for significant increases in energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions from transportation, up to 300 percent for freight (figure 7.17). Studies in Jinan, for instance, calculated that household vehicle kilometers traveled are five times larger in the more modernist single-use superblock configuration than in a mixeduse, traditional street-grid neighborhood (MIT-Tsinghua-EF 2011). A priority action for promoting compact urban form is to revisit the statutory urban planning rules that are barriers to optimizing resource use. Lower densities are partly a consequence of China’s statutory urban planning rules and related land market policies (see supporting report 2). Largely unchanged for decades, statutory urban planning rules require blocks to measure 400 meters on a side, which locks cities into car dependence. Japanese cities, by comparison, have an average distance of 50 meters between intersections, making them more pedestrian-friendly.

FIGURE 7.17 Fuel consumption for freight (40-ton trucks) and congestion 90 Fuel consumption (liters per 100 km)

FIGURE 7.16 Road network length and urban density

84

80 70 60

52

50 40 30

28

20 10 0 0

1 Stops per km

Source: Larsson 2008.

2

479


480

URBAN CHINA

oversized road width, resulting in distances of 300 to 450 meters between buildings on opposite sides of the roads. These setback rules prevent reducing the size of the urban block to a more energy-efficient size—if the urban block were smaller than 400 meters, after deduction of setbacks, there would be very little land left for the building footprint.

FIGURE 7.18 Superposition of carbon emissions per capita for private transport and urban density in metropolitan London, New York, and Paris

Carbon emission for private transport (tCO2 per capita)

14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

2

Ubrban density (1,000 inhabitants per km ) New York City, United States Paris, France

London, United Kingdom

Source: Bourdic 2011.

Among the key statutory urban planning practices or rules to be reviewed are these: Oversizing of urban street grids. Unchanged for the past 20 years, the sizing of the grid prescribes a main road every 500 meters and an even bigger road (10 lanes) every kilometer. This rule is responsible for three constraints on energy efficiency: the oversized urban “super” blocks; oversized main roads with 8 to 10 lanes and high speed limits create a “constrained” hierarchy that makes adjacent urban elements difficult to access; and they prevent street scaling that is needed for efficient distribution of traffic flows, resulting in lower linear densities of streets (kilometers of roads to square kilometers of urban area), more traffic jams, and higher energy use and carbon emissions from transportation. The absence of a scaling hierarchy in the street network—that is, the absence of secondary and tertiary levels of streets—results in a linear density of streets that is on average five times lower than in Europe and in Manhattan and ten times lower than in Japan. Setback rules. In some cases, the frontage is set back 100 to 150 meters from the already

Green space requirements in the block. Although a global target of 30 percent green space may be desirable if applied throughout a city or neighborhood, its calculation at the block scale and the requirement to implement it block by block prevent any size reduction of the blocks—again, if the block size were reduced there would be little ground left for buildings. Absence of superblock subdivision into smaller plots. This rule results from the state ownership of the land and prevents any complexity and fine grain in the clusters of buildings through a progressive development of the block. Once developed, the superblock cannot be redeveloped afterward because of the lack of a land market allowing further subdivisions and sales either of smaller land plots or of building rights. Spacing between the buildings for solar access. The rule that requires spacing the buildings at a distance equal to 1.7 times their height to ensure solar access has a very strong impact on the built volumes by constraining the form and height of the buildings. Combined with the setback rule, the rule prevents a perimeter development of the block, it requires leaving the land in the superblock almost empty, with plot coverage ratios around 15 percent. The only solution left to developers to increase density is to make the buildings larger and increase their height, with detrimental effects on energy efficiency. Large-scale zoning. Chinese zoning practices are set at a very large scale, preventing a finer grain of zoning that would allow mixed uses. These practices could be revisited to promote greater mixed uses, which would bring amenities, jobs, and services, closer to housing, thus reducing transport needs.


GREEN URBANIZATION

Compact urban forms will need strict emission controls because more people will be exposed to pollution in a smaller area. Many public outcries from environmental incidents originated in cities in China. When people are concentrated in a smaller area, a single negative environmental incident can have large multiplier effects on human health. Therefore, policies that promote redensification offer both challenges and opportunities. While exposure levels have increased as a result of urbanization, measures to reduce exposure in dense areas can reach more people, more quickly, and thus improve cost effectiveness.

Providing sustainable and safe urban transportation An efficient transport system supports urban economic growth by moving goods and people within and between cities quickly and at low cost.21 Transport is also critical for social inclusion. As cities grow in size, the distance between one’s residence and one’s job also rises, and it is often low-income groups who can find affordable housing only far away from economic centers. Besides supporting growth and inclusion, transport also affects sustainability. Overreliance on individual transport and a large stock of inefficient vehicles lead to congestion, rising energy consumption, and air pollution. China’s cities have two tasks to ensure that urban transport not only supports inclusive growth but also sustainability objectives. First, they can avoid emissions and lower congestion by continuing to encourage a shift to public and nonmotorized transport with much greater attention to the quality and convenience of public transport services. Price instruments and regulations will help reduce car travel, but urban planners should also create compact cities with well-coordinated land use and transportation plans where alternatives to automobiles are more feasible and efficient. Second, for vehicle traffic that cannot be avoided, the second priority is to reduce emissions from a cleaner vehicle fleet. Here, China should broaden achievements in transport pollution control by accelerating the switch to ultra-low-sulfur diesel and gasoline

for vehicles nationwide, transitioning to new vehicle emission standards for heavy-duty vehicles, and rapidly phasing out high- emission vehicles that account for a large share of emissions. Reducing the environmental burdens imposed by a growing transport sector is not just a welfare issue. Impacts from the sector also have a large, measurable cost. Time lost to congestion and associated higher fuel use causes by far the highest external, or indirect, costs from transportation, followed by health damages from air pollution, traffic safety, and noise pollution. International estimates of total indirect costs from road transport range from $0.05 to more than $0.40 a kilometer (Proost and van Dender 2011). Two studies have estimated the indirect costs from transport in Beijing. Mao, Zhu, and Duan (2012) put the figure at 4.2 percent of GDP for congestion costs only, while Creutzig and He (2009) put it at 7.5–15 percent for all types of externalities. Even at the low end of these estimates, the large external costs from private transport can justify significant policy intervention including support for public transit from general revenue or dedicated taxes where preferred policies such as congestion charges or energy and carbon taxes are not feasible (Parry and Small 2009).

Encouraging more efficient urban transport Urban road expansion will not be able to keep up with the continuously rising number of vehicles in China’s cities. China’s vehicle fleet has grown by more than 14 percent a year on average over the past two decades, largely fueled by private car ownership. In 1990, China had 5.5 million vehicles, of which only 800,000 (14.5 percent) were privately owned. In 2012, China had 121 million vehicles, of which 93 million (77 percent) were private cars. As incomes rose, the number of vehicles grew even faster. While better mobility is a universal human ambition, the reality has been that in Chinese cities, more cars have actually reduced mobility because many are stuck in traffic for long hours. So far, the response has been to increase the supply of roads, creating impressive urban road networks in many cities.

481


URBAN CHINA

As road construction becomes more costly or impossible in dense urban areas, more emphasis must be put on demand management, which reduces the amount of travel and shifts traffic to public transit. The most effective management measure is to fully charge drivers the cost of using private vehicles, including environmental and social costs. Road pricing, including congestion charges in all or part of a city, is the economically most efficient management measure, but it is complex to implement and, like all price instruments, affects lower-income drivers relatively more. There are therefore few cities, such as London and Singapore, where comprehensive congestion charging has been introduced. It will often be more manageable to charge tolls on selected roads, such as major arteries or bridges into a city, as in Wuhan where electronic toll collection has been introduced on seven bridges and one tunnel. Parking policies also affect traffic densities. Cities can ration parking spaces, for instance by reducing required minimum parking spaces for new housing or office developments as is now happening in many U.S. cities. And charges for parking spaces should reflect the value of the land, which often exceeds the cost of the vehicles that occupy it.22 Other demand management approaches already used in some Chinese cities include quotas on license plates assigned through auctions or lotteries. International evidence

has been mixed on temporary restrictions, for instance based on license plate numbers. Well-designed restrictions can reduce emissions quickly (Viard and Fu 2013), but they are usually not sufficient to stem the growth of the car fleet over time, and, if poorly designed, they can increase emissions as many households purchase lower-efficiency second cars with different plate numbers. The central government can play a role in establishing clear guidelines for introducing demand management procedures for congested cities. Technical standards and public communication strategies to make congestion and parking charges more acceptable would be included. While national guidelines provide a reference frame, the most appropriate specific policy mix will be city specific. Policies to reduce driving by making private vehicle use more expensive or more difficult should go hand in hand with making mass transit options more convenient. Chinese cities have vastly expanded public transport. The total length of bus lines in operation increased from 145 thousand kilometers in 2006 to 520 thousand kilometers in 2011, about 62.5 thousand kilometers a year (figure 7.19). The total length of metro lines in operation increased from 621 kilometers in 2006 to 1,699 kilometers in 2011. By the end of 2012, the total length of metro lines in operation had reached 2,008 kilometers in 17 cities in China. Moreover, metro systems

FIGURE 7.19 Total length of bus and metro lines in operation b. Total length of metro lines in operation

a. Total length of bus lines in operation 1,800

600,000 488,812

500,000

519,554

1,471

1,400 1,200 km

300,000 237,259 200,000

1,699

1,600

400,000 km

482

145,012

169,384 175,366

999

1,000 763

800 600

835

621

400

100,000

200

0

0 2006

Source: NBS 2007a–12a.

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011


GREEN URBANIZATION

in 28 additional cities have been approved or are already under construction, and the total length in operation is expected to reach 5,000 kilometers by 2015. Despite these significant capital investments in and operating subsidies for public transport in recent years, its modal share in major Chinese cities remains lower than in other major cities such as Seoul, New York City, and Tokyo. Not only is more investment in capacity needed, however, service quality and comfort needs to be improved through better system integration and accessibility. Better service integration includes more convenient, efficient, and safer access to train stations and bus stops, particularly for walkers, cyclists, and people with disabilities; better connections between mass transit and buses; and improved and expanded park-and-ride lots. Integrated traveler information systems facilitate trip planning and keep travelers informed. Giving buses priorities on roads makes the service more convenient, reliable, and efficient. That can be done by creating bus-only lanes and queue jumps that allow buses to proceed with little or no traffic delay, providing traffic signal priority at certain intersections, and installing preboarding payment systems to allow passengers to board buses faster. These measures help buses keep to their schedules, improve bus service, and reduce roadway congestion. Transit-oriented development (TOD) can further improve the convenience of public transit and the efficiency of service provision but has rarely been a specific aim of major developments and transport investments in China. In California, research showed that TOD can increase ridership on rail and buses by three to four times relative to control sites (Lund, Cervero, and Willson 2004). TOD emphasizes compact, mixed-use buildings and neighborhoods that encourage walking, cycling, and use of public transit. The high density of residential and commercial buildings allows proximity to and a functional relationship with transit stations and terminals, giving easy access to high-quality public transport to a large share of the population. Construction of transit hubs as part of TOD also raises surrounding land values signifi-

cantly. Part of the increased land values can be captured through taxes or special assessments, thus helping to fi nance public investments. Better road planning complements TOD through hierarchically classified road networks providing complete city coverage, and through people-oriented facilities for safe walking and biking such as those provided by “complete streets” that consider all transport modes equally. To make integrated, multimodal transport planning work requires close cooperation among the planning bureau, development and reform commission, finance bureau, construction commission, transport bureau, traffic police department, land resources bureau, and others. Many cities have therefore set up a metropolitan transport authority with responsibility for planning and overseeing all transport mode investments and operations in that metropolis. Hong Kong SAR, China, and Singapore offer good examples in the region. Vancouver and London provide good international examples. Such transport agencies are suitable not only for large cities. In the United States, for example, almost 400 federally mandated and federally funded metropolitan planning organizations bring together representatives from a range of local and state agencies and from different transportation modes, such as public transit, freight, bicycling, and pedestrian. The planning organizations also have a citizens’ advisory committee that represents community groups, professional organizations, neighborhood associations, and the private sector. Building and operating an efficient transport network is not feasible without dedicated and predictable funding mechanisms, especially because of the long planning and construction process and the long life span of transport infrastructure. A dedicated fund to improve public transport services could be created in cities through various charges on private vehicles, including earmarking a share of the fuel levy and vehicle purchase fee, currently collected by the central government, but which is mostly used for highways. China’s government should revisit the current central road-financing arrangement to allow for the establishment of urban transport funds for major cities.

483


URBAN CHINA

Controlling vehicle emissions in urban areas Transport-related emissions, mostly from road transport, are a large and growing contributor to air pollutants in urban areas in China. In 2011, vehicle emissions produced 621,000 tons of PM 2.5 in China, 4.4 million tons of hydrocarbons, 6.4 million tons of NOx, and 34. 7 million tons of CO. Vehicle emissions account for a high share of emissions in cities: for example, 56 percent of NOx and 22 percent of PM 2.5 in Beijing, 25 percent of PM 2.5 in Shanghai, and around 30 percent of PM 2.5 in Shenzhen.23 A disproportionate level of NOx and PM 2.5 vehicle emissions comes from relatively few vehicles. In China in 2011, about 4.6 million dieselfueled heavy-duty and 2.7 million mediumduty freight vehicles together accounted for 7.7 percent of the total vehicle fleet but 62.8 percent of NOx and 69.6 percent of PM 2.5 emissions from all vehicles (MEP 2012). Sixty percent of emissions of four major air pollutants are caused by pre-China I and China I emission standard vehicles, which account for only a quarter of all vehicles (figure 7.20). A China I truck, if properly maintained, emits 36 times more PM 2.5, 20 times more NOx, 9 times more hydrocarbon, and

3 times more CO than a similar truck that achieves the latest standard used in Europe (Euro VI). Vehicles also cause a significant and rising share of greenhouse gas emissions. Nationwide, the transport sector accounts for 7.1 percent of CO2 emissions from fossil fuel burning, of which 78 percent are from road transport, according to IEA figures for 2010 (IEA 2013a). While the overall fleet is becoming cleaner, the sheer number of new vehicles is still causing emissions to rise. Continued efforts to reduce vehicle emissions are needed. China has already made major progress over the past decade in reducing such pollution. It has tightened emissions standards following European benchmarks, although with a time lag. Since 2009, it has also begun to encourage scrapping of older vehicles. Fuel standards have been improved to some extent. In its retrospective, the International Council of Clean Transportation (ICCT) estimated that the programs adopted avoided 44 million tons of hydrocarbons, 239 million tons of CO, 38 million tons of NOx, and 7 million metric tons of particulate matter, preventing an estimated 170,000 deaths in 2010 (Fung and others 2010). In the long term, the use of natural gas could be expanded in the

FIGURE 7.20 Vehicle emissions contributions in China b. By vehicle emission standards category

a. By fuel type 99

100 90

60

82.40

50

80 67.40

Emission share (%)

69.60

70 Percent

484

60 50 40

20

29.50

27.60

30 15

10

48.9 40.0

40

21.3 13.0 25.3

30 20

21.6 13.9 15.3

19.6 13.2 15.8

27.0 10.7 13.3

10 2.60

2.80

3.10

0 CO

HC

Diesel vehicle Gasoline vehicle

Source: MEP 2012b.

50.7

48.3

NOx

0.00 0.00 PM

Natural gas vehicle

0.9

0 CO

Pre-China I China I

Source: MEP 2012b.

0.7 HC

0.4 NOx

China II China III

0.1 PM

China IV and above


GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7.8 Promoting electric vehicles in China: Opportunities, challenges, and implications Hydrogen fuel cell and battery electric vehicles (EVs) produce no tailpipe emissions and accordingly little direct pollution in urban areas. Where electricity comes mostly from clean energy sources, total emissions associated with electric vehicles can be dramatically reduced. The introduction of such vehicles has accordingly become central to emission reduction objectives in many places such as the European Union. By 2030, the European Commission targets a 50 percent reduction in the use of conventionally fueled cars (EC 2011). If China’s continuing efforts in energy restructuring are successful, vehicle electrification could contribute significantly to pollution abatement and climate change mitigation over the long term. In 2009, the Chinese government initiated the Ten Cities, Thousand Vehicles Program to stimulate EV development (later expanded to 25 cities). Meanwhile, there is significant EV technology development in China by industry and academia, focusing primarily on batteries and charging technology. The result is an emerging EV value chain with new business models to provide the infrastructure, components, vehicles, and related services. But several challenges need

to be addressed to enable more widespread adoption of EVs: • Standards. China has not yet launched its national standards for EVs, including those for vehicle charging, physical interface, safety and power grid standards, and compatibility with international standards. • Integrated charging solutions. Since the pilot program focused on fleet vehicles (such as buses or taxis), charging infrastructure for private cars has not been fully developed technically and systematically. • Commercial models. It is essential to build a commercially viable business model that bears the cost of charging infrastructure, because the industry cannot indefi nitely rely on government funding. • Customer acceptance. The significant up-front vehicle cost still deters customers, even as the lifetime ownership costs gradually become more favorable for EVs. While leasing could help address this issue, a secondary market for batteries in addition to a vehicle fi nance market would have to be established.

Source: Cackette 2013.

transport sector—if overall gas supplies can be increased. Hydrogen fuel cell and electric vehicles are expected to eventually capture a greater share of the transport market (box 7.8). In the meantime, China should broaden achievements in transport pollution control in three main ways: Accelerate the production of ultra-low-sulfur diesel and gasoline for vehicles nationwide. Enabling China’s refineries to produce ultralow sulfur (10 parts per million or lower) will require large up-front investments, but the additional costs to consumers will be small. The ICCT estimated the annual cost of refinery upgrades (over a 10 year depreciation period) at RMB 9.6 billion for low-sulfur fuel and RMB 16.5 billion for directly upgrading to ultra-low-sulfur fuel. That translates to 2.5 fen and 8.1 fen per liter of low-sulfur gasoline and diesel respectively, equivalent to 0.33 and

1.08 percent of current retail value. Directly upgrading straight to ultra-low-sulfur fuel could raise prices by 5 fen for a liter of gasoline and 13.6 fen for diesel (ICCT 2012b). The most effective instrument to encourage the switch to cleaner fuels is through price instruments (ICCT 2013). For example, Germany’s tax incentive of 12 fen a liter on ultralow-sulfur fuel (both gasoline and diesel) led to a rapid drop in the average sulfur content to 3–5 parts per million (Walsh 2006). Consultation and communication well in advance of the introduction of these policies is essential to ensure their acceptance and effectiveness. Considering the relatively moderate fuel prices in China, a price differential between ultra-low-sulfur fuel and higher-sulfur fuel could be introduced through revenue-neutral preferential fiscal policies. Tax incentives to refi ners provided in the form of accelerated depreciation, deductions in corporate taxes,

485


486

URBAN CHINA

and direct government subsidies have accelerated the transition to ultra-low-sulfur fuel in Japan. In the United States, small refi ners were given a tax incentive of RMB 0.08 a liter to produce ultra-low-sulfur fuel. The transition to low- and ultra-low-sulfur fuels needs to be accompanied by strong standards, coherent administration, and effective enforcement. Currently in China, authority for vehicle emission control is scattered across multiple agencies, with MEP setting vehicle emission standards, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology registering new types of vehicles, and the National Petroleum Products and Lubricants Standardization Committee (called TC280) setting fuel standards. Oil industry representatives and experts close to the industry dominate TC280 and its subcommittee (Fung and others 2010). MEP also lacks capacity for both fundamental research and testing capability. It currently has far less expertise and technical capability than the oil industry, particularly in evaluating the emission implications of various fuel compositions, which is essential for recommending standards. In addition, MEP has limited access to data on refi nery capacity and has to rely on the industry’s analysis of the cost and technical implications when considering adopting more stringent standards. FIGURE 7.21

Transition to stricter vehicle emission standards especially for heavy-duty vehicles. Reducing emissions from new cars is important, because once on the road, vehicles are usually not replaced for more than a decade. For China, the difference between current standards (China IV) and Europe’s current Euro VI standards will be relatively modest for light-duty vehicles. The difference is much larger for heavy-duty diesel-fueled vehicles, where NOx emissions are 80 percent lower and PM 2.5 50 percent lower under Euro VI compared with China IV standards (figure 7.21). One reason for high truck emissions is that there are fewer joint ventures in truck manufacturing compared with the car industry where there is greater access to cleaner technology and domestic innovation are more widespread. The cost of adopting new emission standards evolves over time. The standards specify the emissions rather than the technologies to be applied. Accordingly, new emission control technologies emerge continuously and their cost drops as market penetration increases. For gasoline light-duty vehicles, the cost increase is low—on the order of $45—to move from Euro III to VI. For diesel vehicles, the cost is substantially higher—$1,200 for light-duty, and $5,000–$8,000 for heavyduty (ICCT 2012a). For the often very small

Expected pollution reduction from raising current emission standards to Euro VI standard b. Heavy duty trucks

a. Light duty cars 4.0

4.0

3.5

3.5

3.0

3.0

2.5

2.5

2.0

2.0

1.5

1.5

1.0

1.0

0.5

0.5

0

0 PM (0.001g/km)

NOx (0.1g/km)

CO (g/km) China IV

PM (0.01g/kwh)

NOx (0.1g/kwh)

Euro VI

Source: Team calculations based on data from TransportPolicy.net, EU: Heavy-duty: Emissions, http:// transportpolicy.net/index.php?title=EU:_ Heavy-duty:_Emissions (accessed December 2013).


GREEN URBANIZATION

trucking companies in China, these are substantive outlays, but the accelerated adoption of new standards is still justified by the large anticipated health benefits. For such regulations to be effective, they need to be supported by credible enforcement. Otherwise fake certificates and counterfeited or mislabeled fuel will inevitably appear. Enforcement requires resources and sufficient authority to apply fines, as in the case under the Texas Regional Emissions Enforcement Program.24 Achieving significant emission reductions in the urban road transport sector also requires addressing the administrative organization for enforcing vehicle emissions standards. The current Air Pollution Prevention and Control Law provides an incomplete framework to manage emissions from vehicles. It does not explicitly confer to any ministry the authority to recall vehicles that do not meet emission standards. While it allows provincial and municipal level EPBs to randomly select vehicles for in-use testing (like conducting road-side tests), it does not explicitly grant MEP such authority. Lacking clear authority to conduct in-use testing, to assess a penalty on manufacturers producing nonconforming vehicles, or to require manufacturers to recall noncompliant vehicles, MEP has weak enforcement power and limited means to deter production of sub-standard vehicles. Rapidly phase out high-emission vehicles. With China’s rising motorization rate, the number of new vehicles entering its roadways each year far exceeds the number of old vehicles being scrapped. To lower the average emissions of the entire fleet, the phase-out of the most polluting cars and trucks from urban areas should be accelerated. Governments in other countries have used two main measures to achieve this goal: penalizing high-emission vehicles, and providing incentives for early scrapping. Annual vehicle registration fees based on a vehicle emission levels provide the most straightforward way to charge for the damages caused. Seventeen European countries have also extended this concept to address climate change concerns and base all or part of their registration fees

on vehicle CO2 emissions. 25 Individual cities, such as Milan, have also begun to penalize high emission vehicles by either charging them to enter the central and more congested areas or prohibiting them altogether. Providing a subsidy for owners to scrap high-emission vehicles can also be an effective way of accelerating fleet turnover. Several countries introduced time-limited scrapping programs in recent years, although often primarily as a way to stimulate the economy during recession.26 The environmental benefits of scrapping programs need to be carefully evaluated because running a higher-emission vehicle for a few additional years may have less impact than the emissions from producing a new car, especially when the emission requirements for the new car are not strict (Gayer and Parker 2013). Environmental objectives may sometimes be better reached through taxes on high-emission vehicles (Li and Wei 2013).

Meeting urban energy needs by prioritizing efficiency and greening supply China has made enormous strides to improve the energy efficiency of its economy and mitigate some of the environmental impacts of burning fossil fuels in urban areas. Reductions in energy intensity reductions during the 11th Five-Year Plan averted the use of 630 million tons of coal equivalent, or 1.46 billion tons of CO2 emissions. Uncontrolled emissions of SO x , NO x , and PM10 are in decline overall. Yet, the scale and complexity of the challenge remains daunting. Coal still hovers at around 70 percent of primary energy consumption, a similar percentage as in 1980, and severe air pollution persists in many cities despite ever stricter standards. As China’s urban economy grows more efficient and sophisticated, continuing with the same approach to energy policy will not yield the visible, stepwise improvements in environmental quality that China’s urban dwellers will increasingly demand. With efforts in three main areas, China’s cities can accelerate their progress in lightening the environmental footprint of their energy use. First, energy planning should be coordinated with the planning process for

487


488

URBAN CHINA

cities. City planners should work with energy planners to take a systematic approach in evaluating ways to optimize energy consumption by reducing demand across the main end-using sectors and greening the supply mix to meet the residual energy demand. Second, broad-based energy efficiency efforts should be accelerated in the main end-using sectors through a better balance of regulations and market-based policy tools. Third, after measures are taken to reduce energy demand, direct use of coal in cities should be eliminated as much as possible by expanding access to natural gas, removing barriers to commercial renewable energy, and continually strengthening emissions controls of remaining coal-fired power plants and industry. Across all three policy areas, encouraging compact urban forms will be fundamental. The rapid, sustained growth of energy demand presents a unique environmental challenge for China’s cities. Few modern cities in the world depend on solid fuels to the extent that Chinese cities do. In London, for example, household coal use was banned in the 1950s in response to serious air pollution. By contrast, 43 percent of Shanghai’s primary energy supply still comes from burning coal inside the city’s borders (8 percent more is from coal-fired power “imported” into the city) (figure 7.22). Nor is the predominance of coal limited to China’s big cities.

For example, it makes up 65 percent of the primary energy supply in Zibo City, Shandong. In China’s 15 cold climate provinces, where provision of heating is a legal requirement, coal represents over 90 percent of the fuel burned for district heating. Although a greater share of coal is being used in larger, more efficient power (and heating) units that are subject to stricter emissions standards— and pollution controls in all sectors have improved—the absolute increase in coal use in cities, driven by demand, is the numberone reason for poor local air quality and CO2 emissions. Intensive coal use has resulted in per capita CO2 emissions in large Chinese cities that are already higher than in many other cities around the world (figure 7.23). Industry uses the lion’s share of energy in urban areas, representing an estimated 70 percent of total energy demand and 69 percent of electricity use in 2010 (figure 7.24). Heavy industries have been responsible for most of the historic growth in urban energy demand (Hong and others 2011; Ma and others 2012). Because these industries rely mainly on coal, they have also deepened the carbon footprint of Chinese cities. In 11 big cities studied by H. Wang and others (2012), 75 percent of total greenhouse gas emissions came from industrial fossil-fuel use (figure 7.25). By comparison, industrial emissions represent only 10 percent of total emissions

FIGURE 7.22 Primary energy supply in Beijing, Shanghai, and Chongqing municipalities, 2011

0.0%

1.1%

0.4% 6.5%

1.2% 0.0%

14.0%

12.7% 26.3%

9.5% 42.9% 40.6%

32.2%

10.5%

62.5%

26.4% 8.4% Beijing (52.7% coal)

4.9%

Shanghai (51.3% coal) Coal Coal (from imported electricity)

Oil Natural gas

Chongquing (67.4% coal) Nuclear Renewables

Source: Authors’ estimates based on data from NBS 2012c; China Electric Power Yearbook Committee 2011; and State Grid Corporation of China 2011.


489

GREEN URBANIZATION

FIGURE 7.23 Per capita CO2 emissions for 11 large Chinese cities and selected cities around the world

FIGURE 7.24 Industrial energy use as a share of total energy demand in cities, 2010 80

16.5 14.4 13.8 12.1 11.8 10.6 9.9 9.8 9.2 8.6 7.9 7.7 7.5 6.8 6.7 6.2 6.0 5.6 5.5 4.7 4.7 4.6 4.2 3.3 2.9 2.2 1.4

Chinese cities Major cities throughout the world Source: Chinese cities: H. Wang and others 2012; other cities: Carbon Disclosure Project 2012. Note: Per capita emissions for Chinese cities and C40 cities reporting Scope I and II emissions using similar methodologies.

for Tokyo (2007), 16 percent for New York City (2011), and 7 percent for London (2006). Although industry will continue to account for the majority of energy demand in urban areas, energy for heating, cooling, lighting, and equipment in buildings is projected to be one of the fastest-growing segments of demand (Fridley and others 2012). In China’s cities, energy use per square meter of floor space in buildings is still only a small fraction of that used in buildings in highincome countries (figure 7.26). Drivers of energy demand vary between residential and commercial buildings. Based on Fridley and others (2012) and Levine and others (2012), much of the energy used in urban residential buildings will continue to be for space heating and cooling, but by 2020, appliances

78 75

73

74

70 Percent

Wuxi Dallas, United States Wuhan Tianjin Chicago, United States Shanghai Hangzhou Philadelphia, United States Zhengzhou Beijing Guangzhou Nanjing Durban, South Africa Amsterdam, the Netherlands Shenyang New York City, United States Berlin, Germany London, United Kingdom Helsinki Tokyo, Japan Copenhagen, Denmark Jakarta, Indonesia Moscow, Russian Federation Stockholm, Sweden Chongqing Bogota, Colombia SĂŁo Paulo, Brazil

67

66 64

65 60

55 55

55 50 Small

Medium

Large

Mega

City size Industry share of total energy

Industry share of electricity

Source: World Bank calculations using data from Renmin University 2013; NBS 2011a, 2011b. Note: Electricity use is for downtown areas (main city districts) of the 287 municipalities at administrative prefecture level or above; total energy use is for the entire municipality; where 2010 data unavailable, 2009 data are used instead.

FIGURE 7.25 Industrial and nonindustrial CO2 emissions per capita in selected Chinese and other cities

Wuxi Wuhan Tianjin Shanghai Hangzhou Zhengzhou Beijing Guangzhou Nanjing Shenyang Chongqing New York City, United States London, United Kingdom Tokyo, Japan 0

5

10

15

20

Tons CO2 equivalent per capita Industry

Nonindustry

Source: China: H. Wang and others 2012; New York City: Dickinson and others 2012; London: Mayor of London 2007; Tokyo: Tokyo Metropolitan Government. Note: Consumption-based accounting of greenhouse gas emissions, including emissions from direct energy use and from the power sector allocated to end-use sectors. Chinese data are for 2005, New York City data are for 2011, London data are for 2006, and Tokyo data are for 2007.


490

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 7.26 Energy use in commercial buildings in China, the United States, and Japan 350 288

300

328

309

clusters of modern residences are intermixed with more rudimentary housing. Household coal use is most prevalent in—although not limited to—the poorer provinces, especially in the north (World Bank 2013a).

Kwh per m2

250 200

Planning for greener urban energy systems

157

150 100 50 0 China (2005)

United States (2003)

Japan (2006)

China (2030)

Source: Fridley and others 2012; Levine and others 2012. Note: Kilowatt hours per square meter of floor space.

will account for a larger share of demand. Increased energy requirements for commercial buildings will come mostly from lighting, plug-in equipment, and central space conditioning. An estimated quarter of urban households in China rely on coal for their cooking and heating needs, representing an important and at times overlooked source of local exposure to harmful air pollution, most notably very fi ne particulates (PM 2.5) (figure 7.27). Coalburning stoves and boilers typically have short stacks and no fi ltering systems. They are often used in peri-urban areas, where

FIGURE 7.27 Primary household cooking energy in urban and rural areas, 2006

Urban

Rural

0

25

50

75

Percent Electricity Gas

Source: World Bank 2013a.

Kerosene Biomass

Coal Other

100

Leading cities around the world are starting to take a more systematic look at how they can reduce the environmental footprint of their energy use by making energy supply and demand a more integral part of their city plans. Planning for greener urban energy systems is largely about finding synergies between different energy users in urban areas that can achieve environmental objectives through the most resource efficient and cost-effective path. Improving energy efficiency across the different end-using sectors is a top priority, followed by identifying local sources of green energy, “importing” cleaner sources of energy from outside city borders, and mitigating the residual environmental impacts from energy use. This approach to planning will require dedicated leadership to establish effective coordination across different departments and jurisdictions according to specific local circumstances. China is developing an ever-increasing range of targets for “eco-cities” and “low-carbon cities.” If China’s ambition is to bend its environmental Kuznet’s curve more quickly, then it can encourage cities to do the same, especially the more capable ones. As China considers a mix of incentives and regulations to make cities greener, “green” cities could be recognized, like “top runners” in industrial energy efficiency, as those that not only meet their targets but exceed them. While ensuring safe and reliable energy supply, some cities have recently taken a broader view of how they can control their own emissions and environmental footprint by looking at both energy demand and characteristics of the energy mix to see what they can do to green their overall urban energy systems. Traditional sector plans will continue to be needed—new approaches will always depend on strong and well-managed sectors, but they often neglect looking across sectors. Nearly all urban infrastructure sys-


GREEN URBANIZATION

tems depend on energy to function—water supply, wastewater treatment, solid waste management, and, of course, electricity, heating, and cooling. Until recently, city managers have tended to overlook the links between energy end-users, and the ever-growing possibility for end-users to capture and use waste energy and generate distributed energy. At the strategic level, a city should encourage coordinated and reoriented planning for meeting specific emission and environmental goals; this planning would systematically look first to reduce energy consumption as much as possible, then at supply options (prioritizing clean energy resources), and then to managing residual emissions from the remaining use of fossil fuels. As this coordination matures, planning methods integrating various energy sources can be introduced, including energy efficiency (box 7.9). As China’s power sector planning process evolves, energy efficiency should be considered as a resource that is compared with conventional generation to develop a least-cost plan for meeting demand (RAP 2013). The national plan would need coordination with and support from provincial and national energy planning processes.

BOX 7.9

Urban planners should pay much closer attention to neighborhood-scale planning, especially for existing cities. Neighborhoods are fundamental building blocks of cities and can be a useful unit of analysis for understanding city energy patterns and issues. For instance the energy performance of a neighborhood comes from complex interactions of several factors, including construction and (eventual) demolition of buildings, which embody energy over their life cycle; operation of the buildings for heating, cooling, lighting, and the like; travel needs of residents and users of the neighborhood; and the ability of the neighborhood to produce on-site clean energy, offsetting the need to import it from outside its boundary. A joint MIT, University of Shandong, and Normal University of Beijing study compared 27 different neighborhoods in Jinan city, taking into account embedded, operational, and transportationrelated energy consumption (MIT-TsinghuaEF 2011). The study showed significant differences among different neighborhood forms and demonstrated that high-rise superblock forms consume up to twice as much energy as other neighborhoods (figure 7.28). Analyses

“Energy efficiency utility”: Efficiency Vermont, United States

Efficiency Vermont was the fi rst “energy effi ciency utility” in the United States and provides a good example of how local governments can structure a results-focused model using a third-party entity to package and deliver energy savings. Efficiency Vermont is a nonprofit corporation created to provide incentives and support to consumers for energy-efficiency programs. The corporation is run by a public board that oversees all power utilities; its members are appointed by the Vermont state governor and are subject to legislative confi rmation. It is funded through surcharges on consumers’ electricity utility bills. Some of these funds are used to provide technical assistance for auditing, project development, energy management, and employee training, as well as fi nancial incentives to support companies investing in energy efficiency projects. Financial compensation levels for Efficiency Vermont are contingent on the corporation meeting specified targets for energy Source: IIP 2012; Taylor, Trombley, and Reinaud 2012.

savings delivered and other performance indicators. The better the corporation performs, the more compensation it receives (up to a ceiling set by the state government). Energy savings are independently monitored and verified to ensure actual savings are achieved. Targets and funding may be reviewed and adjusted every three years, as part of a longer 20-year plan. Efficiency Vermont has been highly successful in meeting and exceeding its goals. In 2011, initiatives fi nanced and supported by Efficiency Vermont reduced the state’s electricity needs by about 2 percent, at a cost of 4.3 cents (about RMB 0.28) a kilowatt hour—far cheaper than the 12.1 cents it would cost to supply a kilowatt hour of electricity. Because it had a good track record, it now participates in generation planning by offering predictable load reduction through its ability to package energy efficiency improvements.

491


URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 7.28 Energy consumption by neighborhood 140 120 100 1,000 MJ

492

80 60 40 20 0 Sunshine 100

Lv-Jing

Shanghai Garden

Dongcang

Superblock Operational energy

FoshanYuan

WuyingTan

Enclave Transport-related energy

YanziShan

Commercial District

Zhang Village

Grid

Traditional

Embodied energy

Source: MIT-Tsinghua-EF 2011.

at the neighborhood level such as these could start to identify locational priorities within cities, for instance. Apart from energy, the U.S. Green Building Council has in the past few years initiated a neighborhood development sustainability rating system with a large number of indicators that aim to define and measure what it means to have a green neighborhood.27 Systematic approaches to optimizing urban energy systems to meet specific environmental objectives requires rigorous data collection and synthesis. Dense, mixed-use neighborhoods, for example, offer opportunities for emerging approaches such as waste heat recycling (storing excess heat from a factory or office building for use in a nearby apartment complex, for example) and, in larger, dense areas, economies of scale for district heating. Yet, densely populated areas can constrain use of local renewable resources because energy needs may significantly exceed the locally available renewable energy (Grubler and Fisk 2013). Mapping where peak energy demand loads and potential local resources are located can help city managers and sector planners in identifying the best-suited energy supplies and uses of land for different neighborhoods

or districts (figure 7.29). A number of analytic tools exist that can assist local city governments in applying energy and emissions reduction planning principles and setting priorities (annex 7.2). Using these tools is still a stretch for many Chinese cities but could be introduced in a number of pilot studies. For instance, Shanghai (Changning District) and Qingdao have used marginal abatement cost curve tools to establish a cost-effective path to realizing their carbon emissions reduction targets (box 7.10). Measures for controlling pollution that cannot be avoided by reducing energy demand or changing the energy supply mix are also essential. Understanding the residual environmental footprint of energy use will clarify outcomes of the choices made for efficiency and supply. It can help to compare the costs of greater efficiency or greener supplies with the costs of end-of-pipe pollution controls. Furthermore, actions to abate local pollution may have trade-offs that affect local supplies of recycled waste energy, such as closing or relocating industry, which are a viable source of jobs and income. Land markets often play a major role in this process. As cities become richer, land values in inner city areas rise, forcing low-value land uses such


GREEN URBANIZATION

FIGURE 7.29

Mapping London’s electricity demand

Source: UK Power Networks in City of London 2011.

as heavy industry out of the city. Additionally, emission standards, if enforced, can play a supplemental role in relocating polluting enterprises. While the use of industrial waste heat for district heating may be an attractive option, for instance, it cannot be evaluated without taking these issues into account. It is especially important to study how cities organized their many departments to work in an integrated and systematic manner. Because this systematic approach cuts across sectors, it does not have a natural constituency or agency that would “plan” urban energy systems. City mayors have been at the forefront of many global initiatives on climate change, and their leadership has been instrumental for green initiatives in their cities. Cities such as New York (box 7.11), Paris, Rotterdam, and Stockholm that have undertaken systematic planning for low-carbon and green development, which is principally looking at urban energy systems, have all used different tools and institutional arrangements to meet their specific needs. Based on local conditions, establishing formal institutional arrangements for this systematic approach to energy planning, optimization, and efficiency in Chinese cities would help meet energy consumption and pollution reduction goals. Even if advanced tools and methods for energy planning are still out of reach for many cities, focusing on efficiency improvements in individual urban sectors can bring substantial benefits. Investments in energy efficiency can significantly lower the operat-

ing expenses of municipal service providers. Some measures can be done quickly, without waiting for new institutional mechnisms or plans. For example, cities can introduce requirements for the use of energy-efficient pumps or efficient street lighting that meet minimum energy performance standards and can be implemented through municipal investment approval processes or other oversight functions. Spending on electricity represents about 18 percent of the costs of supplying and treating water in medium to large cities in China—slightly better than the average for municipal water utilities in other upper-middle-income countries (19 percent) but still higher than the average for utilities in the upper-income countries (15 percent).28 There are significant disparities between urban water utilities in China and room for improvement among lower performers to reach best-practice levels. If wastewater treatment facilities in all Chinese cities could operate as efficiently as they do in Shenzhen (figure 7.30), annual electricity use could be reduced by about 3.1 terawatt hours (TWh), translating into cost savings around RMB 2.4 billion.29 Reorienting approaches to optimizing urban energy systems involves not only local but also regional and national stakeholders. Cities will need to work actively with energy supply companies, and perhaps with neighboring municipalities, to promote greater supply of cleaner energy. This work is important not only because cities host the major energy consumers in China and can there-

493


494

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7.10 Tools for low-carbon development planning: The experience of Changning District in Shanghai Shanghai City’s Changning District has set out a vision to become a leader in low-carbon urban development. To advance its vision, the district teamed up with the Shanghai Energy Conservation Supervision Center, the World Bank, and McKinsey & Co. in 2010 to develop a marginal CO2 abatement cost (MAC) curve for the Hongqiao area, an economic hub in the center of the district (figure B7.10.1). The MAC curve study will help the district set medium-

term targets and policies for reducing CO2 emissions by allowing city leaders to evaluate the abatement potential of a menu of technologies, weigh the cost and difficulty of deploying these technologies, and identify priority investments. The results show that Changning District can meet its target of reducing the carbon intensity of its economy by 17 percent between 2010 and 2015 by investing RMB 500 million in a basket of easy-to-implement, least-cost technologies.

FIGURE B7.10.1 Marginal abatement cost curve for Hongqiao area of Changning District, Shanghai

The MAC curve is a powerful tool to visualize abatement potentials and costs in setting CO2 reductions for local city governments, but it does require a great deal of detailed information on energy use, technologies, and costs. It may be most appropri-

ate for larger, relatively sophisticated cities where data are readily available. By focusing squarely on the technology options, other options such as land use planning and behavioral changes are separately considered.

Source: World Bank ESMAP 2013.

fore influence supply, but because ambient air pollution trends in China show that cities are heavily affected by energy consumption in surrounding provinces. Policies influencing clean energy supplied from outside city boundaries also clearly need national leadership and support: green urbanization is a shared responsibility between national and local stakeholders. The following sections of this chapter follow the principles of the approach above by

fi rst exploring options for improving energy efficiency in key energy-using sectors of the urban economy and then identifying priority actions that can be taken to support shifts in the energy structure of cities.

Rebalancing markets and mandates to reduce energy use in industry30 While China has built a comprehensive system of regulations, policies, and institutions


GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7.11 New York PlaNYC 2030 case study: Integrated centralized planning relying on decentralized delivery New York City, America’s largest municipality, embarked on a long-term planning process called PlaNYC 2030 to devise wide-ranging strategies for reducing materials and energy use, improving natural spaces, planning for and mitigating the effects of climate change, and creating a more equitable and engaged society. Strategies were designed and are being executed by a joint task force, led by a specially designated mayoral office and comprising 25 city departments and stakeholders from state and federal agencies, businesses, and nonprofit groups. To strengthen local ownership of the plan, the task force has engaged in media outreach efforts and offered incentives and support to encourage active participation by local business owners and residents, including grant programs and changes in zoning codes intended to create new development opportunities (ICLEI USA and City of New York 2010). The plan is now in its fourth year of implementation. The energy and emissions strategy for PlaNYC is focused on achieving a goal of reducing city-wide greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent in 2030 compared with 2005. Because buildings account for 75

percent of the city’s total carbon emissions, PlaNYC has kick-started a number ambitious programs and policies to improve energy efficiency in the city’s building stock. This buildings effort has two major elements: the promulgation of new laws (together called the Green, Greater Buildings Plan), and the formation of the 200-person Green Codes Task Force to recommend code and other reforms to reduce a number of environmental impacts of buildings (that is, not just energy use). The green plan requires regular energy audits, retro-commissioning, and data sharing for large public and private buildings; lighting upgrades; and submetering of government buildings and commercial tenant spaces. These measures will cover more than half of the space in 16,000 buildings in the city. To ensure compliance, procedural incentives exempt from retro-commissioning and audits buildings that adopt measures early or comply with Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) standards for existing buildings, a revolving retrofit loan fund has been created with federal stimulus funds, and the city is forming a large energy service company.

Source: Adapted from Zhou and Williams 2013.

to improve energy efficiency in industries— and this system has achieved large reductions in energy intensity—the ability of the system to continue to deliver energy savings will depend on how well it can match the growing sophistication and diversity of the enterprises in it. The current approach has relied heavily on administrative targets and regulations. The system can be strengthened by rebalancing administrative measures with more market-based approaches to motivate enterprises to plan, manage, and implement energy efficiency measures as a part of their own business self-interest. Two broad areas where the national government and cities can focus their efforts are rebalancing the current mix of incentives toward the increased use of market-based tools, backed by ambitious regulations and targets; and enabling companies, through supporting policies, to improve access to suitable technical and fi nancial services for

energy efficiency. Provinces and local city governments play an instrumental role in industrial energy efficiency policy. They are on the front lines of implementing policies and have the most direct contact with enterprises. They are often the pioneers of new policies, which are piloted locally and later scaled up. The dominance of industry—its contribution to GDP, jobs, energy demand, and emissions—is a distinguishing feature of Chinese cities. In 2010, the secondary sector (composed of industry and construction) produced 49 percent of economic output and 48 percent of jobs in China’s urban areas.31 Even with a structural shift toward services, industry is expected to remain a mainstay of China’s urban economy for decades to come.32 It will also likely continue to be the largest end user of energy (Fridley and others 2012; Zhou and others 2011) and a major contributor to local air pollution. Reining

495


496

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 7.30 Energy use per unit of water treated by municipal water utilities, various years

Zhuhai (c2008) Mysore, India (2008) Tokyo, Japan (2008) Quezon City, the Philippines (2009) Vijayawada, India (2008) Northwest China (2006) Pune, India (2008) Northeast China (2006) Johannesburg, South Africa (2008) Southwest China (2006) Danang, Vietnam (2010) Toronto, Canada (2008) China average (2009) Hong Kong SAR, China (2008) Central China (2006) Hohot, Mongolia (2010) East China (2006) Sydney, Australia(2009) South China (2006) Shenzhen (c2008) Gaziantep, Turkey (2010) Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina (2011) Belgrade, Serbia (2009) 0

0.20

0.40

0.60 0.70

kWh per m3 Chinese cities

International cities

Source: International city data from World Bank ESMAP TRACE database; China data from Wang, Song, and Bai 2013; Liu and Jiang 2012; Yang and others 2008; and Zhao and others 2010. Note: Chinese city data includes electricity use only, which typically represents 60–90 percent of total energy use by wastewater treatment plants in China (Liu and Jiang 2012); international city data includes total energy use, in kilowatt hour equivalents.

in industrial energy consumption is crucial to the resource security and environment of Chinese cities. Reducing energy needs will also be a key element in the competitiveness of industry. In some sectors such as cement, China’s leading firms are nearing or have already reached best-practice levels for energy efficiency, but behind these leaders is a long tail of much more inefficient plants. Projected lower rates of growth in fixed assets and demand for

industrial commodities over the next 10–20 years will start to unmask these inefficiencies, putting greater pressure on inefficient fi rms in energy-intensive subsectors such as iron and steel, cement, and aluminum (Fridley and others 2012; Zhou and others 2011). Firms will have fewer opportunities to grow out of their inefficiencies by increasing production capacity. The ability to capture cost savings from energy efficiency can contribute to competitive advantages. China’s 11th Five-Year Plan produced solid results of a reported 19.1 percent reduction in energy intensity (NDRC 2011), but perhaps more importantly, it laid the foundation of policies and programs for long-term energy savings: a legal and regulatory system with energy conservation offices or groups and supervisory offices set up at provincial and most prefecture levels of government. Cities acquired considerable experience with the design and implementation of major programs. When planning low-carbon and energy-efficient programs, cities can tap these lessons and help to introduce improvements and innovations. China’s 12th Five-Year Plan expanded and improved the programs, and, while there are serious efforts to introduce more market-based tools and mechanisms, delivery largely continues to depend on this, still relatively new, administrative system. While this system and its suite of evolving policies and programs will serve China well into the future, many policy makers and energy efficiency experts are asking whether enterprises and local city governments are fully seizing energy efficiency opportunities under the current mix of regulations, incentives, and financing options. Both enterprises and local city governments face challenges. Enterprises are offered little flexibility in meeting government-mandated targets for energy savings, which may be poorly matched to actual company potentials—leading to a passive mentality and little effort beyond meeting minimum requirements. A lack of high-quality energy audits and accurate benchmarking has limited the ability of enterprises to identify realistic or cost-effective efficiency improvements (see Yang 2010, for example). Flexibility in meeting targets has been limited by the hard timetable set for


GREEN URBANIZATION

enterprises to achieve a certain level of savings each year during the 12th Five-Year Plan. While hard and binding targets do spur action, there are limitations if compliance is too prescriptive. Tight political timetables may conflict with longer-term business planning by enterprises and narrow the scale of energy efficiency investments. Local city governments, meanwhile, often lack the technical expertise and experience required for monitoring and reviewing energy use by industries and may not be able to effectively shoulder the burden of enforcing policies and targets. A more balanced mix of incentives and supporting measures for industrial energy efficiency can help relieve constraints on enterprises and local city governments in pursuing energy efficiency improvements. With the right combination of incentives and supporting programs, enterprises may become more proactive, lightening the administrative burden on local city governments of meeting policy objectives. Local city governments meanwhile can play an important but more indirect role in helping enterprises do better by facilitating access to technical and fi nancial services, monitoring the process, and supervising results.

Rebalancing administrative measures with greater use of market-based incentives The government-enterprise agreements that set mandatory energy savings targets for enterprises and establish the mutual responsibility of the government and enterprises in fulfi lling these targets are a cornerstone of China’s industrial energy efficiency policies and should continue. An extensive institutional infrastructure has been built up at all levels of government to implement the agreements, with the provinces playing a lead organizing role and local city governments assuming responsibility for day-to-day supervision.33 The agreements delivered huge energy savings in the 11th Five-Year Plan, and savings targets have been ramped up for the 12th Five-Year Plan. Nearly 17,000 enterprises are now covered by agreements under national and local programs, representing as much as 60 percent of China’s total

energy use. Still, these programs need to be strengthened to ensure that they continue to deliver results in the 13th Five-Year Plan and beyond. Key issues are maintaining the coverage, ambitiousness, and motivational power of the agreements while also introducing greater flexibility for enterprises in meeting their targets. At the national level, the government should continue to set ambitious targets for limiting energy use. In principle, useful targets for limiting energy use could be denominated in total energy, coal, or carbon. While each kind of target has pros and cons associated with it, the key issue will be to ensure that these targets are coordinated in order to avoid policy dilution or loss of regulatory coverage. Box 7.12 illustrates how obligations to reduce energy intensity might interact with a cap on carbon emissions under an emissions trading system. Both kinds of obligations, in addition to renewable energy targets, can and do co-exist in the United Kingdom and other European countries, but interactions between overlapping targets must be assessed carefully. New targets to limit carbon emissions and energy use should build on the current energy-savings agreement platform as much as possible to ease the burden of compliance for both industry and local city governments. While maintaining coverage and ambitiousness of targets, the national government can give enterprises more flexibility in meeting targets for energy use by allowing for trade, giving enterprises the option of purchasing energy savings certificates (or carbon abatement credits if the ETS is implemented) as an additional way for them to meet their targets at lowest cost. A number of provinces and cities are already piloting trading schemes for carbon emissions, and a few exchanges have been established. Other provinces and cities outside the carbon ETS pilot areas could initiate pilots in trading energy savings certificates to build the experience and institutional architecture needed for larger-scale trading. These different pilot schemes would provide the national debate with valuable experience on various policy options for decarbonizing the economy, which include carbon cap and trade, carbon taxes, and green and white certificate

497


498

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7.12 Maintaining coverage of energy efficiency obligations under the current system with the introduction of a new system of carbon emissions trading In linking a nationwide carbon emission trading system (ETS) with the current system of energy savings agreements, two of the key design questions for policy makers will be what facilities will be covered by the two systems and whether a cap will be imposed on Scope 1 (direct greenhouse gas emissions) or Scope 2 (broadly, indirect greenhouse gas emissions from the consumption of electricity, heat, or steam) emissions. Energy savings agreement obligations under the 12th Five-Year Plan cover around 17,000 industrial enterprises, which together account for about 85 percent of industrial energy use or 60 percent of China’s total energy use (NDRC 2012). If, hypothetically, the energy savings agreements were replaced with a carbon ETS for which allowances are issued based on Scope I emissions, as is the case in the European Union, direct coverage of industrial energy use would be reduced by about 25 percent. The remaining obligations would be shifted to electricity generators. The effect on industrial energy efficiency would depend on several factors, including the stringency

of the carbon cap, allowance prices, and the ability of power suppliers to pass on costs to consumers in the form of higher prices. If power utilities are not able to raise the price of electricity, caps are not tight enough, and carbon allowance prices are too low, then the incentives for industry to save energy could be severely weakened. Tightening the cap and allowing power utilities to raise tariffs would not necessarily solve the problem of incentives. Absent other reforms, the revenues of power generators and grid utilities would continue to be linked with sales of electricity and investments in expanding capacity. Thus, while power utilities would have an incentive to supply cleaner electricity—and to charge more for that electricity—they would have little motive to reduce demand by industry. Also, despite facing higher energy prices, industries may not invest in energy efficiency without other incentives and enabling policies. Should the accounting method change and include Scope 2 emissions, however, then the coverage could remain largely the same and incentives in place for industry to reduce energy demand.

Source: Robert Taylor.

trading. However tradable certificates are denominated—whether in carbon or energy savings—a national system of trading will require an extensive institutional infrastructure to monitor, verify, report, and register savings. New targets should build on the current energy-savings agreement platform as much as possible to ease the burden of compliance for both industry and local city governments. Local city governments should continue to join national and provincial efforts to improve the collection of data on energy use by key enterprises and building thirdparty capacity for monitoring and verification (MRV). This system can also support potential trading schemes. Greater use of third-party MRV could also help to alleviate supervision burdens on local governments and help verify energy savings for projects receiving government support. China has taken steps in this area but could enhance it by standardizing qualification requirements

and broadening the currently narrow base of companies in the MRV system. In addition, fi xed asset investment appraisals for energy efficiency have been introduced and could play a more prominent role, with enhanced appraisal capacity from use of qualified third parties, in ensuring new investments are technically advanced, meet standards, and are energy efficient. Adjusting fuel and electricity tariffs to better reflect social and environmental costs of fossil fuel use should continue. Raising prices on energy can provide additional market incentives for industries to improve their energy efficiency. China’s national and provincial governments are in the process of reforming existing taxes on the production of fossil fuels including coal, oil, and natural gas. Proposals for a revised coal tax suggest a rate of 2–5 percent, which, based on average coal prices in 2012, would amount to about RMB 10–25 a ton. 34 By comparison, economic studies have placed the average dam-


GREEN URBANIZATION

ages to public health from burning one ton of coal in China at about RMB 156 (in year 2012 prices) (Nielsen and Ho 2007; Ho and Jorgensen 2003). China will need to conclude its debate over the effectiveness and transaction costs associated with ETS and carbon taxes and introduce a clear and consistent policy on carbon pricing so that businesses can plan for it. Revenues from energy taxes or the sale of tradable allowances could be recycled for energy efficiency and emission reduction programs to provide additional, targeted incentives. Recycling revenues can have a tremendous multiplier effect on efficiency gains. For example, an analysis of household energy use in the United Kingdom shows that recycling the additional revenues from a 3-percent rise in energy prices into efficiency programs produces cumulative energy savings nine times greater than the savings that could be achieved with a price increase alone (Lees 2012). The recycling approach has been an important element in policy discussions and design in major carbon ETS examples in the northeast United States, California, and the European Union. 35 Regardless of how public revenues are recycled, government-funded incentives for energy efficiency should be evaluated regularly to ensure that the greatest amount of additional and verifiable energy savings are being achieved with the least amount of public money. The need for periodic review and adjustment is also needed for existing incentives, such as investment awards for energy efficiency projects and tax rebates for buying energy-efficient equipment.

Enable companies to respond more easily to incentives and regulations Evidence has shown that higher energy prices have significantly reduced the energy intensity of Chinese manufacturing, but the impacts of higher prices vary considerably across consumer categories and between industrial sectors (Fisher-Vanden and others 2013; Lin and Liu 2011). Raising energy prices to capture the social costs of pollution alone will not always result in industries making investments in energy savings.

Pricing will need to be packaged with other policies that address persistent barriers to energy efficiency. The barriers include organizational challenges (such as low awareness of technical solutions or managerial bias in favor of investments in production growth); insufficiently developed financial services for energy efficiency investments (because of high transaction costs and small scale, for example); and regulatory shortcomings (such as inflexible or prescriptive compliance requirements that limit ambitions to go beyond government mandates). A basic element of enhancing the ability of industrial enterprises to pursue energy efficiency projects is ramping up their ability to manage their energy use through accelerated placement of competent enterprise energy managers. Energy managers can also support government-enterprise dialogue on complying with energy efficiency policy. National regulations already require that key energyconsuming enterprises appoint energy managers, but in-house staff in these companies typically only have general knowledge about monitoring energy use and assessing savings opportunities. Local governments can greatly improve specialized, technical knowledge of energy managers by cooperating with provincial and national agencies to arrange for rigorous training, helping to monitor energy manager proficiency by ensuring they meet minimum job and professional criteria, among other things. Energy managers are responsible for establishing energy management systems (EnMS);36 The government has required key enterprises to adopt these systems based on a national standard, but left it up to the individual provinces to decide whether certification of EnMS should be mandatory. To avoid superficial EnMS adoption, EnMS certification and accreditation standards should continue to be developed at the national level, drawing on local experiences such as an EnMS certification pilot with over 130 enterprises in Shandong province (Zhu 2012). 37 Local authorities could continue to propagate the EnMS concept, experience exchanges among enterprises, mobilize technical assistance, and evaluate and publicize energy savings performance outcomes from adoption of the EnMS.

499


500

URBAN CHINA

Ensuring good-quality, competitive technical and financial services is also an enabling factor in which all levels of government play a role. Most enterprises, especially small and medium ones, cannot easily access all needed services alone—from energy audits to developing, financing, and executing projects. Te energy efficiency services industry has grown, especially the use of energy savings performance contracting promoted by energy service companies (ESCOs) (Sun, Zhu, and Taylor 2011). However, the capacity of technical service providers still lags behind the practical needs of many enterprises. For most fi nancial institutions operating in the market, energy efficiency fi nancing is at best a niche business. National policy encouragement, from the China Banking Regulatory Commission, for example, would be useful to further motivate Chinese banks to be more active and create and use appropriate new, innovative financial products. A greater diversity of fi nancing mechanisms needs to be available to industries with different financial circumstances, such as financial leasing, equity, and use of off-balance-sheet energy performance contract financing from ESCOs. Local city and provincial governments can support the development of locally active service companies by procuring technical services for supervision of energy efficiency programs, fostering membership in regional and local associations, issuing guidance on common energy efficiency service standards, and facilitating information flow between enterprises demanding and supplying services. Among the many forms of support at national levels, strengthening energy audits by standardizing the procedures and providing good tools and training programs is a top priority because good-quality energy audits are fundamental to realizing opportunities and developing new projects. The key is to help the service industry grow without overregulating and stifling it. Encouraging the innovation of new business models for promoting energy efficiency can help both industry and local city governments, particularly in the use of specialized third-party companies to package and deliver their energy savings projects (Taylor 2013). Larger cities can be leaders in policy

experimentation, testing new delivery models that maximize cost-effective energy savings from public investments such as energy efficiency utilities and energy efficiency resource acquisition programs, like those in the United States. In North America, for instance, local governments in about 30 states and provinces have through regulation effectively contracted for electricity distribution utilities or specialized third-party companies to deliver specific amounts of verified energy savings in key subsectors or targeted locations. Use of qualified third parties eases the local government’s direct burden because the company is responsible for pursuing and delivering energy savings and receives compensation against verified performance benchmarks. The company has incentives to seek out the maximum amount of energy savings for the least use of public funds. Over time, thirdparty companies typically become more adept at delivering more savings at lower costs as programs grow, experience is gained, and market knowledge of end users is deepened (see, for example, box 7.9). Such a program could be piloted in China is through the national Demand Side Management Pilot Cities program, which allows utilities and cities to experiment with new models for reducing power loads.

Leading by doing: Serving the people in more efficient and cleaner buildings To achieve deeper and more rapid reductions in energy consumption in new and existing buildings, a core task for China’s national and local governments is to harness the business interests of building developers, materials and equipment suppliers, investors, and owners to construct and maintain a greener built environment. For new buildings, spatial planning rules, mandatory building energy efficiency codes (BEECs), green building labels, and financial incentives need aligning. BEECs should be broadened to encompass the main design elements of energy usage, and clear, time-bound targets should be set to progressively raise standards. Better training, technical services, and market awareness of green building designs and materials are needed across the entire supply chain. For


GREEN URBANIZATION

efficiency upgrades of existing buildings, benchmarking can inform mandatory retrofit policies supported with incentives. Reducing exposure to indoor air pollutants will need consistent building material standards and tighter enforcement (see box 7.13). Local governments should lead by example, promoting energy efficiency in public institutions and helping to build a market for technical service providers, such as ESCOs—especially in still underdeveloped parts of China. Buildings, where people live and work, are critically linked to the environmental sustainability of cities, primarily because of their operational energy use and, in China’s case, the large-scale construction of new buildings. The staggering pace of new building construction over the past two decades has transformed China’s urban landscape and deepened its energy footprint. Total floor space of residential and commercial buildings in China’s cities has increased fivefold since 1995 to 33.3 billion square meters in 2011. As a result, energy resource use has doubled over the past decade for space heating and cooling, lighting, hot water, appliances, and equipment in residential, commercial, and public buildings in cities, reaching about 491 million tons of coal equivalent, or 14 percent of the nation’s total primary energy demand (THUBERC 2013) (figure 7.31). This figure does not take into account the amount of embodied energy used in the manufacturing of building materials and appliances of building users. From an urban perspective, the operation of buildings dominates urban energy consumption in modern, service-oriented cities. For example, buildings account for roughly 60–70 percent of overall final energy consumption in Hong Kong SAR, China, and London. Energy consumption is likely to be similar in the urban core of large Chinese cities (such as within the fifth ring road of Beijing). China has set ambitious goals and put in place a comprehensive policy framework for improving energy efficiency and environmental performance of buildings. By 2015, the country plans to reduce energy use in buildings each year by 45 million tons of coal equivalent (MOHURD 2012), and by 2020, national authorities have established

a target for increasing the share of certified green buildings in new construction to 30 percent (State Council 2013). Policies to meet these goals include mandatory standards, voluntary rating systems and labels, and fi nancial incentives for investing in greener, more energy-efficient buildings and appliances. Still, barriers remain. Even though many design techniques and technologies to achieve significantly higher energy efficiency in buildings have already been commercialized, market incentives for building developers to adopt green building features are weak. Developers typically do not operate the buildings they construct and may not see a direct benefit in reducing energy costs for owners and tenants. Some reports suggest payback periods of up to 10 years for the incremental cost of building to green standards. Conventional design practices rarely use reliable energy simulation modeling, design professionals lack expertise and experience with integrated design approaches, and there are few published green building performance data for monitoring and evaluation (China Greentech Initiative 2012). With uninspired developers, local city governments continue to struggle to monitor BEEC compliance at the torrid pace and massive scale of new construction. More expensive retrofits may be required in the future to meet national targets for curbing energy use in buildings.

Building energy efficiency in new construction Mandatory building codes will continue to be the fundamental policy lever for the national and local governments to enforce higher efficiency levels in new buildings. However, BEECs can be strengthened and better aligned with fi nancial incentives and voluntary labeling programs to promote ongoing improvements in environmental performance. Cities have the power, particularly through land use planning and zoning, to facilitate more energy efficient and greener structures (box 7.14). Clear, time-bound targets should be set for tightening design standards for energy efficiency to eventually require “low-energy” buildings. In the Chinese context, low-energy buildings could be clearly defi ned in terms

501


502

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7.13

Cleaning the air indoors: The other air pollution

As the rapid pace of construction has transformed the urban landscape, the indoor environment of buildings over the past 20 years has also undergone transformational changes. Increased use of plastics, polymeric floor and wall coverings, synthetic wood products and cleaning agents, and air conditioning in closed spaces have significantly increased people’s exposure to indoor air pollutants such as vola-

tile organic compounds (VOCs). Medical studies in China suggest a possible link between birth defects and asthma in children in urban areas and increased exposure to organic pollutants and dust in the indoor air. In China, indoor concentrations of known harmful substances are typically higher than in other countries, so researchers anticipate that the negative health effects are greater (Zhang, Mo, and Weschler 2013).

FIGURE B7.13.1 Concentrations of formaldehyde and benzene concentrations in buildings a. Concentrations of formaldehyde in the air inside residential buildings in various cities Uppsala, Sweden Boras, Sweden Goteborg, Sweden Nagoya, Japan Shimizu, Japan (winter) Shimizu, Japan (summer) New York City, United States (winter) New York City, United States (summer) Los Angeles, United States Mexico City, Mexico Ferrara, Italy Paris, France Quebec, Canada Prince Edward Island, Canada Cairo, Egypt Tianjin, China Beijing, China (winter) Beijing, China (summer)

b. Concentrations of benzene in the air of buildings in various regions Finland

WHO recommended indoor Limit 0.08 ppm

Japan Hong Kong SAR, China Central Europe Milan, Italy Turkey Korea, Rep. Singapore Guangzhou, China

0

0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Indoor concentrations of benzene (μg/m3)

Indoor formaldehyde levels (ppm)

Source: Liu and others 2012. Note: The World Health Organization does not have a guideline standard for benzene because “no safe level of exposure can be recommended” (WHO 2010).

China has issued several standards establishing allowable concentrations of VOCs and other harmful substances. Systematic monitoring in individual buildings is much more difficult than monitoring ambient air quality outdoors, because individual sources of pollution are harder to identify and the regulatory framework for enforcing many standards is lacking. Consistency between standards must also be

improved. For example, exposure periods and allowable levels for VOCs in building design and acceptance standards are not the same (Huang and Wang 2010). In addition, China has introduced mandatory certification requirements for building materials (standards CNCA-12C-049, CNCA-12C-050, and CNCA-12C-051), but certification is limited. Other common materials are exempt. See figure B7.13.1.

Source: Huang and Wang 2010; Li 2010; Liu and others 2012; Zhang and others 2013.


GREEN URBANIZATION

Tons of coal equivalent (millions)

FIGURE 7.31 Primary energy consumption in China by end use in residential and commercial buildings, 2010

46 26 35 124

37

37 22

75

89

71

Residential

Commercial

Other Cooking Appliances and equipment Hot water

31

Lighting Central cooling Space heating

Source: Fridley and others 2012. Note: Includes both urban and rural buildings, measured in million tons of coal equivalent.

of maximum allowable design loads (that is, energy requirements for space conditioning, lighting, and ventilation), achievable costeffectively through a broad range of techniques for different climate zones. The targets would provide a clearer signal to investors and direct the building market toward realizing longer-term targets for efficiency, allow-

ing for BEECs to be raised progressively. Both the European Union and the United States have set time-bound policy goals for new buildings to achieve low-energy building status. by the end of 2020, new buildings in EU member countries will have to achieve nearly zero-energy building status. This type of long-term signaling can also have a strong influence on infrastructure planning in cities. For example, dramatically reduced heating loads may make district heating in some less densely populated, peri-urban areas uneconomic or require a higher degree of innovation in heating supply. National BEECs should also be updated regularly on the basis of robust, whole-building life-cycle cost analysis, and they should be expanded gradually to include green building design elements like waste and material use. A three- to five-year cycle is appropriate to keep pace with the changing technologies and economics of energy efficiency improvement. A fi xed cycle of revisions also improves the alignment of BEEC updates with the timebound energy efficiency target. Underpinning the revision of BEECs with life-cycle cost analysis would help to determine the most cost-effective improvements to the codes. To this end, greater and more transparent use of building energy simulations are needed to help evaluate alternative building design approaches. BEEC design-based energy sav-

BOX 7.14 Münster, Germany: Low-energy building standards through sale of city-owned land By mandating low-energy building standards in sales contracts of city-owned land, the City of Münster in Germany encouraged the local real estate market to embrace energy efficiency. The standard, locally known as Niedrig Energie Haus, imposes stringent thermal performance requirements for any building envelope that exceeds the existing German federal building regulations by 30 percent. Between 1997 and 2010, the standard was implemented in constructing over 5,600 low-energy housing units and 85 energyefficient commercial buildings in the city. By 2010,

80 percent of all new buildings—even those not built on city-owned land—were following the city’s energy efficiency requirements. The standard has saved the city 13 million kilowatt hours in annual energy use. The benefit-cost ratio to the city was more than 6 to 1 and the estimated incremental cost to homeowners was, on average, about €2,600 a house (about 1.4 percent of construction costs). Riding the momentum of positive market reactions, Münster’s City Council has since proposed a passive house standard to raise the bar for efficiency even higher.

Source: Energy Sector Management Assistance Program, World Bank, http://www.esmap.org/node/1170.

503


504

URBAN CHINA

ings estimates can have “simulation gaps” because conventional design practices do not necessarily use energy simulation models. As discussed, revisions to urban spatial planning regulations are needed to create urban forms that optimize the overall energy efficiency of the built environment. Over the past thirty years, China has created an urban fabric where buildings stand farther apart from each other, creating a broken urban “fabric.” In cold climate zones, this broken pattern leads to higher energy requirements for heating than a continuous urban fabric consisting of buildings clustered together along the perimeter of street blocks. A comparative analysis done in Europe found that in a temperate climate, in a 1.44 square kilometer area, a continuous urban fabric consisting of 21-meter-high buildings requires four times less energy for heating than a broken urban fabric consisting of 60-meter-high, freestanding towers (Salat 2012). In warmer climates, buildings in densely populated urban areas can be spatially organized to create better ventilation and shading and reduce air conditioning requirements. A main task for provincial and city governments will be to improve enforcement of BEECs throughout the entire construction cycle to reduce the risk that buildings will not be in compliance when they are completed, when they can be costly and difficult to fi x. Local city authorities also play a crucial role in piloting and implementing new standards and are directly responsible for ensuring compliance. According to MOHURD’s officially reported statistics, at the design stage, compliance rates with BEECs in prefecturelevel cities rose from 5 percent in 2001 to a reported 99.5 percent in 2010 (Levine and others 2012).38 Yet, especially at the county level, there is significant gap between large and small cities in BEEC compliance during implementation. In China’s third-party compliance enforcement system, the construction supervision companies are held accountable for BEEC compliance inspection and reporting. Small cities often do not have sufficient resources to support the necessary government oversight of the third-party inspections. Such issues could be collectively addressed at the prefecture or province level, so that ade-

quate training is provided for the construction trades in county cities, which are administrative subordinates of the prefecture cities. Local governments can also play an instrumental role in encouraging broader market uptake of voluntary building labeling programs, including the three-star Green Building Evaluation Standard (GBES) and the five-star Building Energy Efficiency Labeling (BEEL) systems. Currently under revision, the GBES was established by MOHURD in 2007 and covers a broader scope, and is more stringent, than the national BEECs. 39 Both the GBES and BEEL are in an early phase of market adoption, although they are required for all large commercial buildings and public offices with an area greater than 20,000 square meters. By the end of 2012, just under 800 buildings had received green labels, and fewer than 300 BEEL buildings had been certified. Although national and local authorities are setting hard targets for new buildings to meet green standards, at this early stage, the profusion of multiple, overlapping rules and ratings can create confusion in the market (Levine and others 2012). Compliance with more aggressive BEECs and uptake of voluntary rating systems for green building can be improved through a more strategic alignment of fi nancial incentives with policy goals. Existing financial incentives for new buildings have mainly focused on integrated renewable energy systems, including rooftop solar photovoltaic capacity and solar hot water systems— although in 2012, new incentives of RMB 45–80 per square meter were announced for buildings achieving two- or three-star GBEL ratings. Given the speed and scale of desired market adoption for new green building standards, additional incentives and support, such as preferential tax treatment and assistance in completing the certification process, are needed. Perhaps most important, public incentive programs should seek ways of leveraging financial awards with improving access to commercial financing and project services. (Levine and others 2012). Piloting coordinated fi nancing incentives with mandatory building codes and voluntary ratings can test such an approach, as in Singapore’s Green Mark scheme (box 7.15).


GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7.15

Singapore’s Green Mark scheme

Singapore’s Green Mark scheme, run by the Building Construction Authority, was launched in January 2005 with a strong focus on energy efficiency. It provides a meaningful differentiation of buildings in the real estate market and has had a positive effect on the industry’s corporate image and on the leasing and resale value of buildings. The distinctive aspect of the Green Mark scheme is that it is used to support the government’s green building master plan as the basis for technical capac-

ity building and as a measure for determining government financial incentives for new constructions or retrofits. By purposely integrating mandatory requirements, voluntary ratings, and financial incentives for high achievers under a strategic plan for scaling up green buildings, Singapore demonstrates an effective way for transforming the building sector toward green and sustained energy efficiency improvement.

Source: Building and Construction Authority, Singapore, “About BCA Green Mark Scheme,” http://www.bca.gov.sg /greenmark/green_mark_buildings.html (accessed December 2014).

In accelerating adoption of green building standards and given the high variability in capacities in design, supervision, and inspection of buildings nationally, China will need a large-scale training and knowledge building effort across the entire supply chain. The concept of green buildings is rooted in an integrated approach to design, encompassing not just energy efficiency but also other environmental objectives, which may clash with traditional zoning regulations and overly prescriptive building codes. For instance, local design institutes may be more accustomed to traditional urban planning and building design approaches or may be concerned about transgressing codes and regulations. With the ambitious pace at which national and local governments are seeking to increase the share of green buildings in cities, there is a risk of “green washing”—the superficial and incomplete application or standards (Draugelis and Li 2012, 186). The success of the U.S. Green Building Council in promoting the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) standard in the United States, for example, is owed in large part to its efforts to reach out to all parts of the building community, including developers, property managers, materials suppliers, architects, and engineers.40 An accreditation system similar to the LEED Accredited Professionals program could gradually increase the pool of qualified professionals in China. Training will also be needed for buildings authorities in local city

governments. Flexible, holistic approaches to applying green design standards aimed at reducing the overall energy footprint of buildings can be further piloted in those cities that already possess a high level of competence and experience. Finally, as a part of knowledge-building efforts, the national and local governments should also work with industry associations and stakeholders to expand the scope, increase the credibility, and improve market awareness of green building materials labeling. Developers interviewed have cited lack of credible information on materials and suppliers as one of the main barriers to green building (China Greentech Initiative 2012).

Building energy efficiency in existing buildings Focusing on efficiency in new buildings is not enough. Most buildings of pre-2005 vintage were constructed without accompanying BEECs. Especially in cold regions, upgrades of existing residential and commercial buildings will be critical for meeting targets for reducing building energy use. The government has initiated a large thermo retrofit program in northern China with significant subsidy support (15 to 20 percent of retrofit cost). During the 11th Five-Year Plan, 150 million square meters of residential buildings in cold and severe cold region were reportedly retrofitted. In the 12th Five-Year Plan, an additional 400 million square meters of residential thermal retrofit is planned for

505


506

URBAN CHINA

this region. Yet, these buildings only account for a small fraction of the pre-2005 urban residential building stock in the region (estimated at about 5 billion square meters). The main challenges to pursuing efficiency upgrades in existing buildings are less technical and more financial and organizational. Home and property owners need both incentives and effective local organization to stimulate interest in retrofitting. For instance, the current practice of flat fees or area-based billing for heating does not give residents incentive to save energy on space conditioning. Implementing consumption-based billing for heating in the northern provinces would allow homeowners to gain fi nancial benefits from energy cost savings, while retrofits would increase comfort levels for people living in cold flats. How retrofits and billing are sequenced matters a great deal. Currently, retrofits are typically required before consumption-based billing for heating is begun to avoid saddling owners and occupants with high energy bills for poorly performing buildings that were constructed long ago. However, postretrofit billing lowers the motivation and interest of consumers. In principle, government subsidies for retrofits can provide incentives, but the level needed to accelerate renovations is likely to be very high. Any financial constraints could create an impasse that can slow down both consumption-based billing and the retrofits. Several countries in Eastern Europe facing similar problems in the 1990s started with consumption-based billing fi rst and started various support programs, including lines of credit, to help stimulate homeowner interest in renovation. In China, the government could mandate a deadline for implementing consumption-based billing after retrofitting to make the link between retrofits and energy savings clear and it could allow cities to implement the billing before the retrofits if they choose to do so. To address organizational barriers, many East European countries have promoted retrofits of existing building through vigorous public awareness initiatives involving homeowners, condominium associations, building managers, and NGOs. Major retrofits required homeowner consent and fi nancial

contributions. Energy audits needed to be translated into clear investment proposals and communicated in ways occupants could understand. While there are some standard approaches, a degree of customization in technical measures and fi nancing is usually required. Buildings with similar types, uses, and vintages might have significant structural and operational differences—and owners and occupants might have different preferences and financing capacities. It is advisable to introduce a degree of flexibility in government support programs that set clear metrics for energy consumption reductions but allow for greater customization to reflect local building conditions. For commercial buildings, building operators might not find energy bills sufficiently high enough to concern themselves with retrofits, so additional motivation is needed. Shanghai is experimenting with establishing energy consumption benchmarks that building operators are required to meet, while extending dedicated lines of credit to support retrofits. There is ample experience and successful examples of national loans for building retrofits in EU countries, providing longterm, low-interest loans through commercial banks for residential retrofits based on a standard set of criteria and procedures, sometimes combined with additional capital subsidies for specific energy savings level achieved.

Promoting building energy efficiency in public institutions Although the largest share of the building stock in China is privately owned, the public sector has a significant role to play in leading the move to buildings that are more energy efficient.41 Public buildings represent about 6.2 percent of final energy demand in China and like other end-using sectors are dependent mainly on coal and coal-fi red electricity. Upgrading of existing public buildings and better construction of ones will have an important demonstration effect and will create a larger market for green building products, resulting in lower costs and better access to services for private building owners as well. The benefits of improved energy efficiency in the public sector make a com-


GREEN URBANIZATION

pelling case for local city governments to lead by doing. The local governments should institute consumption-based district heating metering and billing for all the facilities they own or control, for instance. A precondition for improving efficiency in the public sector is development of technical expertise and clarification of responsibilities for promoting energy conservation. That will be a major and multiyear undertaking because of China’s size and diversity in public facilities. Among the highest priorities is the establishment of good statistics on energy use. Metering is fundamental to energy data collection and diagnostics but is far from universal. Better collection of energy use data through online monitoring systems, some already in place, should be supported by better public disclosure. The use of awards can harness the natural interest of local leaders and managers of public entities for recognition. Award systems require unbiased data on energy use and environmental performance to be publicly available. Rating systems are another way to bolster enthusiasm for improving energy savings performance, including scorecards such as those issued each year to rate the performance of U.S. federal agencies in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, energy efficiency, and water conservation. Piloting the use of publicly disclosed scorecards in a subset of institutions, such as municipal office buildings, would recognize achievements, maintain accountability, and compel actions to improve their buildings’ performance. Public facilities could also be allowed to retain the savings from reduced energy use in building retrofits, as laid out under the State Council’s Order 531 (2008). Detailed local budget and accounting regulations are needed, and some cities, such as Beijing, have already developed them. Absorbing energy cost savings back into general funds is a strong disincentive. Instead, regulations should explicitly allow for various expenditures, including small upgrades or new equipment, that directly benefit the facility. Retrofits in schools can have multiplier effects when combined with classroom lessons on energy efficiency and sustainability that students then share at home (World Bank 2012b).

Capital budgets for public institutions are hardly ever sufficient in most countries, and China is no exception. Continued use of China’s national- and provincial-level special funds to cofi nance capital budgets for public institutions is encouraged. Budget support for project preparation costs, metering, and establishing statistics systems could also be shouldered by general funds to remove further transaction costs. China has just embarked on a power utility based demand side management program that could make special efforts to target public institutions, as is done in many countries. Revolving funds could be managed at local levels to help leverage capital budgets and subsidies. Careful analysis of these schemes would be needed to avoid crowding out commercial financing, where available. Energy service companies offer an opportunity for public-private partnership schemes and provide an alternative source of fi nancing for public institutions. ESCOs in China have started working in buildings but, unlike the ESCO market in the United States, industrial energy efficiency projects dominate the market. The State Council in 2010 issued a decree identifying ESCOs as a major market mechanism for promoting energy efficiency investments. Accelerating penetration of the public building market will require defi ning accounting rules for energy savings performance contracting and for selecting ESCOs through public procurement procedures, including prequalification criteria public institutions can use. It will also require strengthening measurement and verification to ensure efficient use of taxpayer funds. The European Union and the United States offer examples of different ESCO schemes, which local governments could study. For instance, the SuperESCO model experience in the United States Federal Energy Management Program provides opportunities to streamline procurement for energy efficiency retrofits across different public institutions. An ESCO could be competitively selected for a multiyear performance-based contract and allowed to approach departments with investment proposals without further selection procedures. Some transactions could be subcontracted to smaller ESCOs in the local market, further

507


508

URBAN CHINA

from coal in the near term, cities need to rely more on electricity and renewable sources of energy over the long term. Initially, most renewable energy will be produced outside city limits, which will require the removal of barriers related to pricing and grid access for commercial renewables and stricter emission controls on thermal power generation. Over time, distributed generation and production of renewables from municipal sources such as landfi ll gas, wastewater gas, and municipal solid waste within cities can contribute to meeting energy demand where feasible. China can adapt the most appropriate models for regulation, metering, and financing of small-scale renewable production based on experience gained elsewhere. Cities around the world have tended to gravitate toward cleaner fuels as incomes rise and cities develop. In China’s cities, however, the transition away from coal has not happened quickly enough or on a large enough scale to keep up with the rapid urban growth and avoid persistently bad air quality. Millions of urban dwellers continue to rely on dirty fuels for cooking and heating (figure 7.32). Although cities are actively taking steps to rein in the most harmful uses of coal (box 7.16), incomplete reforms in the gas, power, and heating sectors have posed additional barriers to expanding the market for cleaner energy alternatives. Completing these

facilitating their development. The details are complex and need to be studied carefully to ensure transparency and efficiency. It is recommended local governments identify a specific unit that can provide technical assistance for facilitating use of ESCOs.

Securing clean energy sources No modern cities rely on coal as much as Chinese cities still do. Because coal is a major contributor to air pollution and CO2 emissions, reducing the use of coal must be a centerpiece of urban energy strategies. Coal use can be reduced in cities by expanding access to piped natural gas, scaling up local production of renewable energy, and “importing” from outside city boundaries supplies of energy that are as clean as possible. Natural gas is currently limited in China, but domestic production and imports are increasing. Given current supply constraints, gas usage should be prioritized in the residential and commercial sectors, where it can have the largest environmental and economic benefits. Because cities rely more on electricity and power generators and large industries will rely on coal for some time to come, emissions control standards must continue to be tightened and enforced in those sectors and efficiency improved. While natural gas can be an important fuel to transition away

FIGURE 7.32 Access to natural gas in China’s 10 largest cities compared with other cities

80

40 20

60 50 RMB (thousands)

80 60

c. Annual income

b. Access to LPG 100

% of population

% of population

a. Access to town gas 100

60 40 20

0 2003

2010

20

0 1990

2003

China’s 10 Largest cities

Source: NBS 1991b–2011b.

30

10

0 1990

40

2010 Other cities

1990

2003

2010


GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7.16

Cities take active measures to reduce harmful burning of coal

In Taiyuan, the capital of China’s largest coalproducing province, city officials have been reducing coal use by shutting down small heat-only boilers and expanding the district heating network, supplying gas to small and medium enterprises, and eliminating direct use of coal for cooking and heating in the city center and in peri-urban areas near the city. Beginning in the early 2000s, Shenyang removed 1,000 heating plants over the course of three years, reducing the number of heating enterprises from 1,062 to 410 (many operating small dispersed boilers) and increasing the share of centralized heating supply from 55 to 80 percent. Urumqi has promoted the use of combined heat and power plants, larger district heating networks,

and, since 2012, gas-fi red heating supplies as a part of its plan to reduce severe winter air pollution. Heating in Urumqi was estimated to contribute 16 percent of total annual average concentrations of SO2 , and 8 percent of PM10 and NOx. Since the 1980s, Beijing has led the trend in Chinese cities toward increasing the use of natural gas and phasing out direct combustion of coal by small-scale residential and commercial consumers. Many large district heating plants in the city were converted to gas, the most polluting factories were relocated, and a coal ban has been enforced in the central downtown area. The ban was extended to the fourth ring road by the end of 2013. The city also recently announced a hard target of capping its total annual coal consumption at 15 million tons by 2015.

Source: World Bank 2012a, 2011a, 2011b; World Bank, Shanxi EPB, and Xinjiang EPB 2012; World Bank–MEP 2012.

reforms will be necessary to accelerate efforts to reduce the burning of coal and improve access to cleaner fuels in densely populated urban areas.

Increasing the supply of natural gas to priority consumers in urban areas The potential benefits to urban air quality of expanding access to gas are enormous, but gas supplies are limited, and certain endusing sectors should be given priority to maximize social benefits. Highest priority should be given to households—as cities worldwide have done. Once infrastructure for piped natural gas (or “town gas”) is in place, small commercial users such as stores, hotels, and restaurants can gain more access to gas. Replacing coal with natural gas in the household and commercial sectors is especially important because end-of-pipe emissions controls are usually either too expensive or not technically feasible. After residential and commercial users, centralized heating facilities should be the next priority for supply. A few cities, such as Beijing and Urumqi, have already converted a large amount of district heating capacity to gas-fired capacity. Supply constraints make it important for each city to evaluate the most efficient configuration

for gas-based heating (for example, whether to supply base load or peak load for district heating or distributed generation), taking into account potential renewable heat sources and existing sources from combined heat and power and waste heat sources. In distributed systems, natural gas units are able to meet multiple demands of cooling, heating, and power, and can reduce the transmission and conversion losses associated with heat-only systems with lower heat load densities, which is an important consideration as buildings become more energy efficient. Use of gas for electricity generation and industry, which currently account for 60 percent of gas use nationwide, should be carefully compared with the uses outlined above. Nevertheless, increasing gas supplies to China’s power sector could provide important efficiency benefits if used for meeting high peak loads or it could provide additional flexibility to the power system, including easier accommodation of intermittent renewable electricity supply (Kahrl and others 2013). Because residential consumers are a top priority for scaling up natural gas supplies, achieving universal access to piped natural gas for urban households would require the supply of gas to increase from around 30 billion cubic meters in 2011 to nearly 70

509


510

URBAN CHINA

70 60

m3 (billions)

50 40 30 20 10 0 2011

2015

2020

2025

2030

Source: Team’s calculations.

billion cubic meters in 2030 (figure 7.33).42 Urban population serviced by piped gas would increase from around 500 million in 2013 to about 850 million in 2020 and reach 960 million in 2030. Total investment required between 2014 and 2030 is estimated at RMB 154 billion, including RMB 16 billion in annual investment between 2014 and 2020. The bulk of the investment would be needed in the 2010s should China decide to make access to piped natural gas for households a priority, replacing the use of costlier fuels such as LPG and dirtier fuels such as coal. Up to 75 billion cubic meters would be needed to shift about 65 percent of district heating to gas (figure 7.34), dramatically reducing the use of coal for heating in northern urban areas and resulting in significant economic benefits from reducing local and global pollution. While the available resources of natural gas can be expanded considerably, accommodating demand by urban users will depend largely on reforms to pricing and market structure. China is piloting pricing schemes that would help address price differentials between domestic and imported gas. Because imports may meet about 50 percent of China’s demand for gas in 2020, narrowing this price gap is important.43 Another needed pricing reform is to address incentives to develop the residential gas market, for which prices are very low compared with those in

other sectors, particularly industry. Beyond adjusting prices, if China is to increase gas penetration, ultimately it should develop a gas law that creates a competitive gas wholesale market and clearly defines the rights, responsibilities, and obligations of operators and government entities. A wholesale competition model could focus on bulk supplies of gas sold to large industrial customers and urban distribution companies. Prices could be determined by negotiated contracts and competitive spot markets; transmission and distribution tariffs could be determined according to a method approved by concerned authorities and regulated. While creating such a model is a medium-term goal, in the short term, it is critical that China allow third-party access to the market. Without third-party access, it will be difficult to increase competition because of the dominance of the three oil companies in upstream development and transmission. Greater urban access to gas requires more investment in distribution networks and storage (especially for dealing with seasonal peaks). In addition to pricing, it will be necessary to address fi nancing, regulation, and access to these facilities. Incentives and reasonable returns should be provided for investors and operators in domestic and upstream gas supplies, liquefied natural gas cargoes, FIGURE 7.34 Estimated fuel required to supply 65 percent of district heating with natural gas by 2030 160 Metric tons of coal equivalent

FIGURE 7.33 Supply of piped gas to urban households needed to achieve universal access to piped gas by 2020

140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 2011

2015

2020 Gas

2025

2030

Coal

Source: Team’s calculations. Note: Fuel use is estimated based on projections for the expansion of heated floor area in the more than 300 cities currently serviced by district heating, assuming continued improvements in the energy efficiency of buildings and supply units.


GREEN URBANIZATION

pipelines, terminals, storage facilities, and distribution networks. Upstream market players also must have a reasonable expectation that price-setting mechanisms will be stable and fair—a task that many developed countries have fulfi lled by creating an independent gas regulatory body.

Removing barriers to renewable energy in cities In addition to maximizing energy efficiency and optimizing use of natural gas in cities, China’s cities can expand use of renewable energy.44 Most cities in the world might be indifferent to receiving electricity generated from renewables or electricity generated from fossil fuels, since both are “clean” at the user end, in China’s case renewable generation has added value by directly offsetting the amount of electricity that would be generated by coal. That can reduce air pollution regionally and lower the carbon intensity of the economy. Diversifying urban energy resources by introducing more renewable-based energy has the added benefit of enhancing cities’ energy security through the “portfolio effect.” Besides receiving more renewablebased energy produced from beyond city limits, cities can also increase their share of self-generated renewable production or distributed forms of energy, where feasible. Completing power sector reforms that began over a decade ago is a top priority for scaling up clean energy in cities. In 2002, the State Council issued Decree No. 5, which outlined comprehensive power sector reforms to introduce fair competition (starting with generation) and develop an open, well-regulated electricity market.45 Although there have been many achievements in the sector, progress has stalled. China’s government can take four actions to support even greater development of renewables. As a fi rst step, it can introduce a two-part generation tariff. Currently, generation tariffs of coal-fi red power plants are given based on China’s dispatching approach, which ensures a certain number of operating hours for each plant. Coal-fired power producers may incur losses when dispatch centers ask them to reduce their generating to accommodate more wind and other inter-

mittent sources of renewable power. Worldwide experience demonstrates that this situation can be rectified by structuring two-part generation tariffs: one charge for available generating capacity (a capacity charge) and one charge for kilowatt hours generated (an energy charge). The capacity charge would allow generators to maintain their current annual repayments of their investments and fi xed costs, while the energy charge would allow them to recover the cost of fuel and other variable costs. Such a reform could be implemented relatively rapidly and would need to be complemented by changes in dispatching practices (RAP 2013). Second, transparent and cost-recovering transmission pricing should be implemented to allow grid companies to recover all costs incurred in safely and reliably delivering power to consumers, including the additional costs of accommodating intermittent renewable electricity. Without such pricing, grid companies will continue to resist bringing more renewables online, and curtailment generation losses of renewables will become more severe. In fact, about 12 percent of wind power generated in the Three-North Region in 2010 was wasted because of curtailment. Because this reform will be based on the future structure of the power sector, it will need to be undertaken in a broader context of electricity pricing reform in China. A third action is to consider adjusting incentives to guide wind developers to build closer to load centers (Song and Berrah 2013). Planning and coordination of grid development to accommodate major wind developments in resource-rich northern China will take time and should be supported by comprehensive studies that would aim to optimize connection size and connection circuit layout in consultation with stakeholders. Shifting the focus to central and eastern regions could lower overall incremental costs of wind power development. The fourth action would be to discourage local governments from imposing additional fees or harmful local sourcing requirements on wind developers that many have introduced as a result of value added tax reforms and rebates on wind power equipment. At higher levels of development, VAT from wind gen-

511


512

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7.17 The Beijing Sunshine Schools program: Linking green policy, pedagogy, and people Under the umbrella of China’s national Golden Sun Program, Beijing will install 100 megawatts of rooftop photovoltaic (PV) systems in schools and other educational institutions in Beijing Municipality. It is the largest such initiative in China to date. Most projects under the Golden Sun Program involve large PV installations in a single location. By contrast, the Sunshine Schools program will involve distributed PV capacity in about 800 facilities. The capacities of most systems are expected to range from 50 to 200 kilowatts. The program will test the renewable energy service company (RESCO) business model for distributed rooftop solar PV systems, whereby investments are fi nanced by the service provider, which also provides maintenance and other after-sale service. The project is also expected to pilot two-way metering and net metering for rooftop PV systems. If proven successful, the project would provide valuable experience and demonstration effects for China’s growing solar PV market.

In addition to policy replication, the program launched a parallel effort to educate students in the schools about environmental sustainability. It includes a competition with awards given out by both Beijing and central government officials as well as school administrators. Online monitors showing the amount of renewable energy generated and carbon dioxide avoided are displayed in the schools. Linking faculty, students, and parents with sustainability initiatives in schools should reinforce green lifestyle concepts both at school and at home. The World Bank is providing a $100 million loan for the installation of the solar PV systems, as well as a grant from the Global Environment Facility to establish online monitoring by the city of the renewable energy generation of the schools and to conduct technical studies on grid connection issues. The hope is that the Beijing project can be replicated in other Chinese cities developing similar schemes.

eration could be higher than pre-reform levels (Song and Berrah 2013). Additional reforms are needed for regulating, financing, and metering distributed generation of renewable energy in cities. Worldwide, there is a trend toward consumers becoming generators of energy, which is transforming energy markets. In China, too, solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity has been growing rapidly, but the development of gridconnected solar PV has been inhibited by a combination of low retail prices for electricity and prohibitions by grid companies against installing distributed generation systems. Recent policy breakthroughs have helped break down some of these barriers to distributed generation and should be aggressively followed through with implementing regulations. In 2013, the State Grid began providing limited grid access to distributed energy, with support from the State Council, and the government announced that it would be shifting from capacity-based subsidies to feed-in tariffs (FITs) based on generation. These new initiatives should be complemented by efforts

to develop new and appropriate models for advancing commercial renewables in Chinese cities, such as in the “Sunshine Schools” program in Beijing (box 7.17). While power sector reforms entail action at the national level, local city governments can also take proactive measures to introduce more renewable energy into their supply mix. Because most Chinese cities import the majority of their energy from outside the city, they are dependent on regional sources of supply, which are mostly outside their control. Still, they can leverage their position in the energy commodity markets as large centers of demand to influence the types of energy they receive. Several options exist for cities to “import” more renewable energy by covering the additional cost for renewable energy until parity with traditional energy supplies is achieved. One is capacity-based, where consumers in a city pay a marginal fee on their utility bills to install a specific amount of renewable energy capacity. Another is energy-based, where consumers pay a small premium for units of renewable


GREEN URBANIZATION

energy they purchase (for example, as a fixed percentage of the electricity they use each month). The Shanghai Jade Electricity Program, started in 2005, experimented with the energy-based approach. Three important lessons were learned in Shanghai: the local government needs to play a very active role in promoting the initiative and, ideally, to link up with national efforts; public education and awareness is critical in achieving buy-in for both nonresidential and residential consumers; and financial incentives are needed to stimulate participation (Peng 2012).

District heating sector reform District heating is one of the last vestiges of the welfare state in China.46 District heating reforms offer some of the clearest and most direct opportunities for improving environmental quality in northern cities. In more than 300 cities where centralized heat in the winters is legally required, over 90 percent of the heat supply is fueled with coal. Most Chinese heating utilities continue to bill consumers for heating based on a flat rate per square meter, removing any end-use efficiency incentives. Old district heating systems in northern cities are often highly inefficient and have historically had poor pollution controls. As a result, ambient PM 2.5 concentrations of cities north of the Huai River were estimated to be about 55 percent higher between 1981 and 2000, and to have reduced average life expectancy by about 5.5 years, compared with cities where heating is not legally required (Chen and others 2013). The district heating sector has grown about 12 percent a year in the past five or six years and is about 50 percent larger in floor area coverage than in 2005 (World Bank 2012a). Achieving a greener district heating sector will require a broad range of technical innovations, pricing, and institutional reforms, including modernizing regulations. It will also require a major effort in building technical and managerial capacities in the utilities and regulators to usher in modern management techniques. Since the government issued guidelines for heating reforms in 2003, there have been many pilots and lessons learned that can be used to accelerate reforms.

Mandatory heat metering should be implemented at least at the building level with a binding timetable for introducing consumption-based billing and two-part heat pricing. Metering enables heating companies to understand energy consumption patterns and allows consumers to pay according to use. While apartment-level metering is preferable, building-level metering should be allowed to avoid expensive and disruptive internal pipe retrofits and accelerate metering. Two-part heat tariffs include charges for variable and ordered capacity costs, and thus are incentives for enduser efficiency while covering justified fi xed costs. The popular practice to set the fixed part on a flat square meter basis should be changed to a capacity-based charge, creating incentives for consumers with energy-efficient buildings to reduce ordered capacity, freeing it up for new connections. Incentive-based tariff regulation would also encourage heat suppliers to improve their operating efficiency. Ensuring adoption of commercial accounting principles based on uniform guidelines from the Ministry of Finance by heat companies would help get tariffs right. The central government could clarify tariff methodologies for combined heat and power plants to improve transparency and consistency across cities. In addition, general subsidies to households, including low tariffs, should be replaced with more targeted assistance and extended also to poor households just above the current threshold for public welfare programs. A World Bank survey conducted in Liaoning Province in 2007 found that in RMB terms, heating subsidies for the richest households were similar to those for the poorest households, so that in the end, out-of-pocket spending on heating bills amounted to 2 percent of income for the richest households and 7–10 percent of total income for the poorest households (World Bank 2009). China could consider issuing a national district heating regulation to address the lack of a strong legal mandate for related institutions to undertake reform and issue national district heating planning guidelines to ensure consistent planning approaches that incorporate energy- and carbon-intensity reduction goals. The regulation could, for instance, establish licensing of operators as a key reg-

513


514

URBAN CHINA

ulatory tool to force suppliers to meet their obligations (including for environmental performance and financial reporting). A broader provincial role in monitoring sector development, facilitating knowledge exchange, and supervising the regulation, if issued, would help with the supervision of district heating in the 15 provinces and over 300 cities where heating is mandated. With sufficient capacity, provincial authorities could take on licensing responsibilities and participate in dispute resolution. The lack of an autonomous regulator with clearly a defined role, budget, and enforcement authority is a key reason for uneven and relatively limited modernization of the sector. A national regulation could create such an institution, perhaps even at the provincial level. The guidelines would establish principles and approaches for least-cost planning as well as dispatching guidance. Because cities are very involved in the utilities’ investment decisions, the city has important responsibilities in investment approval. The planning function, combined with the investment approval process, should not only aim to ensure heat supply security but also protect consumers from unreasonable costs. The use of coal for heating should be deliberately avoided. Coal should be switched to gas where supply can be secured, renewable resources integrated where feasible, and strict emission controls imposed on remaining coal heating sources. Gas is more expensive than coal, but a package of demand-side management measures, together with modernizing district heating systems, pricing reform, and targeted social assistance could help address affordability concerns. As a first step, gas should replace coal-fired heat-only boilers for peak loads, connected to cogeneration units. Gas boilers are more efficient and flexible and can open doors to more economic dispatch of heat sources, renewables integration, tri-generation technologies, and value-added services such as district cooling. Alternatives need to be carefully analyzed because heating is influenced by local conditions. Generally, over the longer term, the estimated economic benefits of switching to gas-fired district heating are significant and appear to outweigh the incremental costs (box 7.18).

Integrating water resources and pollution management China’s urban water sector faces two severe and interrelated problems. One is to supply a sufficient amount of water to a growing urban population, while also providing for the needs of the industrial and agricultural sectors as well as ecological requirements. Water scarcity has become one of the greatest threats to China’s continuing urbanization process, especially in the north and west, and problems could become even worse in some regions under plausible climate change scenarios. The other challenge is to ensure the quality of water entering the city water system and of the treated wastewater returned to natural water bodies. Urban wastewater, industrial emissions, and agricultural runoff compromise water quality; poor water quality in turn threatens health and leads to higher treatment costs downstream. Water scarcity and pollution interact. Reduced river flow leads to higher pollutant concentrations because there is insufficient water for dilution. China has addressed these problems in the water sector by improving the legal basis for managing water resources and by investing in water supply and treatment infrastructure. Further progress can be made in three areas. First, water supply can be improved by increasing the efficiency of water use, especially in industry and agriculture, and by encouraging a more flexible allocation of water rights across sectors. Underpricing of water currently discourages use efficiency. Insufficient information about water resource flows hinders good decision making but could be addressed using new technologies such as satellite remote sensing. Second, improving water supply quality requires reducing industrial pollution and addressing nonpoint source pollution in the rural sector. Besides better enforcement of regulations, instruments such as payments for ecological services can be helpful where urban water users support actions elsewhere in the watershed that protect water quality. Since one city’s waste water becomes the water supply of another city downstream, further investments in waste water treatment will also be


515

GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7.18 Phasing out coal in district heating provides significant environmental and social benefits FIGURE B7.18.1 Carbon emissions under different scenarios of increasing gas use for heating 140 Actual Metric tons of CO2 equivalent

As China’s cities expand in the coming years, centralized heating will also expand. In a business-as-usual scenario, heated floor space in China’s provincial, prefecture, and county-level cities current serviced by district heating is expected to nearly triple from 4.7 billion square meters in 2011 to 13.1 billion square meters in 2030. Heat supply meanwhile is projected to rise from 96 million tons of coal equivalent (Mtce) in 2011 to 149 Mtce in 2030. Assuming that the share of heat supplied by burning coal continues to hover around 90 percent, coal use for heating is projected to increase from 101 Mtce in 2011 to 120–151 Mtce in 2030, with carbon emissions increasing from 78 million tons of CO2 to 116 million tons. If the current share of centralized heating supplied by burning natural gas (about 3 percent) remains unchanged, total gas use is projected to be only 2.7–3.4 billion cubic meters by 2030 in a businessas-usual scenario (figure B7.18.1). If the share of gasfired heating were to increase to about 45 percent of total heat supply by 2030, gas use would reach 39.9–50.0 billion cubic meters, requiring total additional investment of RMB 34.0–39.2 billion from 2014 to 2030 beyond business as usual (in year 2011 renminbi). Increasing the share of gas-fired heating to about 65 percent would require gas supply to increase to 59.8–75.0 billion cubic meters and total additional

Projected

120 100 80 60 40 20 0 2001

2011

2021

investment of RMB 47.0–54.4 billion from 2014 to 2030 beyond business as usual. Cumulative benefits of reducing coal use and increasing gas use net of additional investment required are estimated at RMB 11.8–14.2 billion between 2014 and 2030 in the scenario where gas-based heating increases to 45 percent and RMB 17.3–21.0 billion where gas-fi red heating increases to 65 percent.

Source: Team calculations. Note: Estimates are based on projections for the expansion of heated floor area in 316 cities currently serviced by district heating. BCM = billion cubic meters of natural gas.

a high priority. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, better water resources management requires institutional reforms. Water utility governance reform could improve cost recovery and coordination mechanisms such as municipal water boards. And because urban and rural water issues are highly interdependent, regional and cross-sectoral water management approaches will be needed to reform water rights allocation and pollution control at a watershed level. Effective reforms will promote sustainable water management and help Chinese cities achieve a “water saving society,” a longstanding concept in China that is in need of a strong boost from local governments.

2029

Business as usual Gas use reaching 50 bcm by 2030 Gas use reaching 75 bcm by 2030

Improving water supply by strengthening demand management With 20 percent of the world’s population but only 7 percent of its freshwater, China has water scarcity as a major problem for sustainable urban development.47 Although China has the fifth-largest endowment of freshwater resources (Moore 2013), its annual per capita resources of 2,100 cubic meters are about one-third the global average. There are strong spatial differences: 81 percent of China’s water resources are concentrated to the south of the Yangtze River, where 60 percent of the population lives—only 19 is therefore available to the 40 percent of the population in the


516

URBAN CHINA

north, where most of the major grain production is located, and in the west. Annual per capita water availability in the north is only about 900 cubic meters (World Bank 2013b). About two-thirds of China’s cities—420 cities—are water short; 110 of those face severe shortages, with a total deficit of 10.5 billion cubic meters. For instance, Beijing’s and Tianjin’s per capita water resources were less than 120 cubic meters, well below the benchmark for serious water shortage of 1,000 cubic meters (Wen and Zhu 2013). Eleven provinces overall fall below this level and are drier than Iraq or Lebanon. These shortages have led to severe overexploitation of groundwater resources, which provide about onethird of northern China’s water supply and as much as two-thirds in places like the Hai River Basin, which is home to Tianjin and Beijing. Nationally, more than 160 groundwater overdraft areas cover 190,000 square kilometers, and each year overextracted groundwater exceeds recharge by 22 billion cubic meters. In the Hai River Basin, shallow water tables have dropped by up to 50 meters and deep ones by up to 90 meters. The main driver of water demand is increasing consumption by a growing population, by agriculture, and by expanding water-intensive industries in the water-short north and west, although declining precipitation, possibly due to climate change, is probably also contributing to water shortages in some regions. By 2030, under current policies, China’s total water demand is projected to rise by 61 percent over 2005 levels (2030 Water Resources Group 2009). Urban municipal and domestic use is expected to rise from about 12 percent of total demand in 2005 to 16 percent. However, the total amount of water use in China will be limited to 670 billion cubic meters by 2020 and 700 billion cubic meters by 2030, according to the National Water Resource Master Plan approved by State Council in December 2010. The water use sectors are expected to take reduction measures. Although average urban residential per capita water use is lower than in high-income countries, it is growing as living standards rise. In the southeast and coastal areas, per capita daily water use is about 190 liters, while in the northwest

and upper Yellow River areas, it is only 70 liters. Industrial water use intensities remain high at 131 cubic meters per RMB 10,000 of industrial value-added. This is about twice the average for high-income countries and ten times that of the best performers such as Japan. Some of the most water-intensive industries are among the worst performers, with steel, oil refineries, paper, synthetic ammonia, and beer production having water use intensities about 10 times greater than those of advanced international competitors. The energy sector, dominated by fossil fuel use, is one of the biggest water users, and some of China’s largest coal-producing regions are in the arid north. Fresh water use for mining, processing, and consuming coal accounts for a considerable portion of water consumption in industry (ADB 2008). Agricultural water productivity is also low. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization, crop water productivity was $3.60 per cubic meter in 2009, compared to an average of $4.80 for middle-income countries and $35.80 for high-income countries.48 The response to water shortages is usually to increase supply—digging deeper wells or building reservoirs or diversion infrastructure. But these are often no more than stopgap measures in the face of rising demand. The first priority therefore must be to create incentives for greater water conservation and for implementation of water-saving production technologies. Water prices have gradually increased but are still low by international standards. In Beijing costs are less than a tenth of those in Berlin or Copenhagen, for instance (figure 7.35). These low residential tariffs are offset in large measure by high industrial tariffs. In many developed countries, industrial water tariffs are usually lower than residential water tariffs. Berlin’s urban residential water tariff is $6.67 a cubic meter, while its industrial water tariff is $2.16. The current industrial water tariff in Beijing of RMB 6.21 and in Tianjin of 7.85 RMB are higher than those in Canada, the United States and other developed countries. Agricultural water prices are also very low, as is common in many countries. China’s agricultural irrigation water use charges consist of fees paid to state-owned water manage-


517

GREEN URBANIZATION

ment agencies and end canal system water fees, and can vary widely. There appears to be room for water tariff adjustments that can better incentivize all water consumers to conserve water and to use it more efficiently in industrial and agricultural production. Raising water use efficiency is critically important, especially in the large agricultural and industrial water-using sectors where water productivity remains low. Increasing water productivity can help address the needs of growing urban population by reallocating water resources from rural or industrial use to municipal water supply. In some countries, that involves market-based trading of water rights between rural and urban users. A prerequisite for such reallocations and for reducing overextraction is better information about available resources and current consumption within a given watershed. Within any given watershed, water is extracted from surface or groundwater sources and used for urban, industrial, or agricultural purposes; some of it then returns to rivers or seeps back into the ground. Only a share is actually consumed, mostly as evapotranspiration (ET) during plant growth. Allocation of water rights requires information on the amount that may be withdrawn; the amount that may be consumed (ET from irrigation); and the amount that must be returned to the local water system at a level of quality suitable for downstream users and ecological needs. If only extraction is monitored, as is common practice today, there is a severe risk of overexploitation of water resources. New methods using satellite remote sensing have made it much easier to monitor ET as a good approximation to actual water consumption that could be the basis of an enhanced water withdrawal permitting system and in the future, potentially for water rights trading between sectors (World Bank 2013b). In the medium term, a better understanding of virtual water flows—water that is embedded in traded goods—also helps identify opportunities for improving urban water supply. For example, water-scarce Shanxi Province exports large quantities of virtual water to water-rich eastern China through trade of water-intensive products such as coal, metals, thermal power, and manufac-

FIGURE 7.35 Water and wastewater tariffs in Chinese cities compared to other cities around the world

Copenhagen, Denmark Berlin, Germany Zurich, Switzerland Luxembourg Sydney, Australia Paris, France Singapore London, United Kingdom Barcelona, Spain New York City, United States Stockholm, Sweden Rome, Italy Moscow, Russian Federation Kiev, Ukraine Hong Kong SAR, China Beijing, China Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia New Delhi, India Riyadh, Saudi Arabia 0

1

2

3

4 5 6 US$ per m3

7

8

9

10

Source: Global Water Intelligence, “Global Water Market 2011-Meeting the World’s Water and Wastewater Needs Until 2018” (2011), http://www.giiresearch.com/report/gwi108050-lobwater-wastew.html (accessed December 2013).

tured items (Li, Liu, and Liu 2011). At the same time, Shanxi imports virtual water in the form of agricultural products (153 million cubic meters in 2007, equivalent to over 2.5 percent of total water use), but unfortunately these come from even more waterscarce provinces such as Hebei, Shaanxi, and Xinjiang. In the Yellow River basin, in contrast, food for water trade between downstream provinces like Shandong and upstream provinces such as Ningxia presents win-win opportunities. Optimizing such flows, for instance by moving water-intensive agricultural production to water-rich areas or relying more on importing virtual water embedded in food products from international markets, would help increase water use efficiency and free up water resources for high-value urban uses.


518

URBAN CHINA

Ensuring the quality of the water supply Water scarcity compounds the problem of water quality, which is at the core of China’s water-related challenges. As rivers and groundwater reservoirs shrink, pollution becomes less diluted and concentrations of effluents, and their impacts, rise. Problems include severe pollution incidents that may be causing “cancer villages” near polluted waterways, but also lower-level chronic pollution that affects health and increases urban water treatment costs. By some measures, water quality in China’s major river basins actually shows small but steady improvement since 2001, thanks to investments in end-of-pipe controls for industry, although water quality continues to be far worse in the northern basins. Industrial pollution accounted for about 19 percent of chemical oxygen demand (COD, an indirect measure of organic pollutants in water) in 2010, declining to 14 percent in 2011. Discharges of wastewater from urban households, meanwhile, are growing and now account for 38 percent of COD in 2011 (figure 7.36). Yet, the largest share of COD comes mainly from nonpoint sources upstream of cities—mostly agricultural (also domestic)—and this share will likely increase (Guo and others 2012). Forty percent of Chinese rivers were seriously polluted and unfit for drinking water in 2010, and in 2011 the groundwater quality in more than half of 200 cities surveyed was rated “bad” (40.3 percent) or “extremely bad” (14.7 percent).49 Groundwater pollution is especially worrying because it takes decades for polluted aquifers to recover. Also, there are now concerns in major urban centers about new kinds of pollutants such as medicine residues, micropollutants, and odor and taste pollutants (World Bank 2012c). Treatment of water entering urban water supply systems is the most immediate way to ensure safe water, but with growing pollution loads accumulating upstream, that becomes increasingly more difficult and costly. Current utility charges are typically too low to fund the upgrading and operations of comprehensive water treatment. Reducing pollution of upstream water resources is thus an effective way to keep costs down and achieve

FIGURE 7.36 Sources of main water pollutants, 2011

11%

14% 1% 38%

1%

57% 2%

45%

7% 25%

COD Industry Sludge from water treatment

Ammonia nitrogen Households Other agriculture Livestock and poultry

Source: MEP, “Total Emissions of Main Pollutants” (June 2012), http:// jcs.mep.gov.cn/hjzl/zkgb/2011zkgb/201206/t20120606_231039 .htm; MEP, “Waste Water,” Environmental Statistics Report 2011 (March 2013), http://zls.mep.gov.cn/hjtj/nb/2011nb/201303/ t20130327_249978.htm; MEP and MOA, 12th Five-Year Plan for Controlling Pollution from Livestock and Poultry Industry(ℐ⚥䔄䥥 ℣㬾㰉㝻旚㱣Ⱦ⋩ḴḼȿ奬↺) (November 2012). Note: Share of livestock and poultry in total emissions is assumed to be the same in 2011 as in 2010. COD = chemical oxygen demand, a waste quality measure.

greater water quality. Regulations of agricultural practices and industrial emissions such as technology and effluent standards will remain the main policy instruments. Market-based approaches can also be effective, although pollution rights trading is even more difficult to implement for water than for air, in large part because both the pollutants and the impacts are more varied (Olmstead 2010a, 2010b). Damages depend considerably on local conditions such as how quickly pollutants mix and disperse with large quantities of water. Downstream water users such as municipalities can also compensate upstream areas for maintaining higher water quality by preserving forests and wetlands or reducing agricultural runoff. Such payments for ecological or environmental services (PES) can often achieve water quality targets at lower costs than additional treatment. Famously, New York City saved $6 billion in construction costs and $300 million in annual operating costs for a new water fi ltration plant by investing $1.5 billion over 10 years in con-


GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7.19 Examples of cost-effective water treatment services provided to cities by natural ecosystems Western Cape, South Africa: Removing thirsty invasive pine species from the Western Cape can reduce the unit costs of supplying water from facilities by $0.03 per cubic meter (2010 prices). Removing invasive species that used large amounts of scarce water was two to seven times cheaper than augmenting water supplies by treating effluence or desalinizing water (van Wilgen, Cowling, and Burgers 1996).

that only a chlorine treatment is needed for disinfection (Jones, Hole, and Zavaleta 2012).

Bogota, Colombia: The city has saved $19.6 million in avoided costs for water fi ltration facilities thanks to wetlands above the city, which filter out contaminants and sediment in the city’s water supply so well

Poyang Lake, China: Located in the heavily populated Yangtze River basin, the lake filters excess nutrients from the water, reducing sewage treatment costs by RMB 4.31 million each year (Zhao and others 2004).

Vientiane, Laos: Flood attenuation and wastewater treatment services provided by That Luang Marsh next to the capital city have saved an estimated $1.5 million in construction costs for sewage treatment infrastructure (Gerrard 2004).

Source: Sall and Brandon, forthcoming.

servation of the upstream Catskills watershed, where it sources 90 percent of its water. Stakeholders included state and federal agencies, environmental groups, and some 70 towns and villages. It reportedly took about 150 meetings to achieve agreement (Postel and Thompson 2005; Salzman 2009). Many such schemes have now been introduced, including in China (box 7.19), but they are difficult to implement under the current fiscal system. PES requires transfers across municipal boundaries and to stakeholders who in turn must use the funds for intended purposes. This process requires competent and transparent monitoring. Nevertheless, PES programs represent an innovative strategy to rectify market failures and also to help address fi nancial constraints faced by rural areas. While maintaining the quality of upstream water sources for cities remains a major challenge, China has made significant progress in improving urban waste water treatment. Coverage improved from 46 percent in 2004 to 84 percent in 2011 according to NBS data, and the 12th Five-Year Plan includes RMB 380 billion for investing in urban wastewater treatment and expanding water quality monitoring stations.50 Those central government transfers should be accompanied by a

greater emphasis on cost recovery. Low tariffs weaken incentives to achieve the government’s widely publicized water saving objectives. Even in better-performing cities like Beijing where the wastewater treatment tariff has already been increased to about 26 percent of the water price, the fee barely covers the cost of treatment and weakens incentives to decrease wastewater. Cost savings could be achieved in smaller municipalities by aggregating water treatment services into a competitive concession or lease arrangement where one utility serves multiple cities. This is a longstanding practice in many countries. Likewise, wastewater should be managed as a network utility business by integrating drainage and treatment management and charging users for drainage services rather than considering them as a public service. About two-thirds of the investment costs and about half of thte operational costs for wasyewater systems come from increasingly complex pipe networks and pumping stations across the city. Currently, wastewater utilities also have no control over industrial discharges into the municipal system, which can lead to overloading the drainage network and the treatment process. Incorporating drainage infrastructure as a part of a commercial or quasi-commercial operation of the

519


520

URBAN CHINA

treatment system can create the incentives to control and charge for industrial discharges. Better cost recovery in the water sector would also support implementation of tightened standards that could “leapfrog” to match those common in high-income countries. While many cities have the resources and capacity to achieve high water quality and treatment standards, some do not. China adopted ambitious new drinking-water standards, following WHO guidelines, in July 2012, but many cities do not have the technical means to monitor water quality according to those standards. 51 In addition, requirements issued in 2005 for expensive tertiary treatment for all municipal wastewater treatment plants (SEPA Circular No. 110) remain beyond the technical and financial capacity of many cities. Transitional arrangements for water treatment and wastewater standards could be introduced in cities with weaker capacities specifically to ensure full and efficient collection of wastewater. Cities and towns that cannot afford the Class 1 or 2 discharge standards (the top standards) could start by ensuring full collection of wastewater and low-cost treatment, with many technologies now available to come close to meeting Class 2 standards. Although this approach does lower standards, it can help to treat wastewater that would otherwise go untreated. Such arrangements need to be carefully monitored and understood to be part of the transition to full compliance.

Strengthening water sector institutions In addition to continuing large investments in water infrastructure, achieving sustainable water supply for China’s growing cities will also require institutional reforms. One priority is the reform of utility governance to strengthen the institutions that deliver urban water and treat wastewater and sewage. The other priority is the establishment of regional coordination mechanisms that can manage water allocations and implement measures to ensure water quality at the watershed or river basin level. One aspect of utility governance, improved cost recovery by raising prices, has already been mentioned as an effective way to encour-

age water use efficiency. A World Bank analysis of China’s urban water utilities from 2004 to 2009 showed weak cost recovery and difficulties with achieving greater self-financing of capital investments.52 Only 44 percent of urban water utilities generated positive net margins, although this share varied by province (figure 7.37). Even the better performing utilities were operating at just above the breakeven point with only 10 percent generating net margins of over 10 percent (a healthy fi nancial performance benchmark is 20 percent). The analysis also showed significant variations in utility financial performance across provinces and within provinces, suggesting that local government interventions do affect utility financial health. In addition, performance was not correlated with size in the sample. Smaller utilities can perform well with supportive tariff policies and competent

FIGURE 7.37 Share of utilities with net positive margins, by province, 2009 Sichuan Fujian Jiangxi Jiangsu Guangxi Beijing Guizhou Tianjin Shanxi Hunan Guangdong Anhui Hainan Yunnan Zhejiang Hubei Shaanxi Shanghai Ningxia Inner Mongolia Gansu Shandong Heilongjiang Hebei Xinjiang Jilin Liaoning Henan 0

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Percent

Source: World Bank analysis and China Urban Water Statistical Yearbook 2009. No data available for Chongqing, Tibet, and Qinghai.


GREEN URBANIZATION

management. Finally, while most utilities (84 percent) generated operating revenues that covered cash requirements for operations and maintenance, the ratios are razor thin and leave little surplus for capital investment. Further analysis of 27 utilities in 9 provinces between 2004 and 2009 showed that utilities’ unit production costs rose on an annually compounded basis at least 5 percent and much more in some cases, so raising prices will be necessary to provide a predictable and sufficient source of revenue for utilities and make them less reliant on support from general revenue. If urban utilities become more commercialized and autonomous, they will have incentives to solve some longstanding problems in the sector (Browder and others 2007; World Bank 2013b). Governance of the water sector is currently fragmented across different offices. To improve coordination, cities in some countries have created municipal “water boards” that coordinate and regulate their water sector. For instance, wastewater tariffs are currently often included in the water bill and collected by municipal water companies, which do not always make efforts to collect the wastewater bills. That also makes it difficult to collect wastewater charges from industries with their own water source. These two issues could be supervised by a water board—a mechanism that could be piloted in more advanced cities first. Members of these boards are typically appointed by city governments and have the power to make autonomous decisions or recommendations on key issues such as tariffs, budget transfers, and capital improvements. As with air pollution, water supply and quality cannot be successfully managed at the level of an individual city or county only. Pollution and overextraction in the upper watershed affect downstream users. Between 1995 and 1998, for instance, the Yellow River did not reach the sea because of excessive water extraction and as recently as 2009, 30 percent of the water in the Yellow River basin was unfit for human consumption, according to MEP. One regional coordination mechanism is an integrated water and environment management approach, which establishes a strategic framework at the river basin level

for both water resources and environmental management. It brings together relevant ministries, local governments, major water users, and polluters. A pilot of the approach has been successfully tested in the Hai River Basin. It established a “joint decision-making conference” as a multistakeholder platform for debate and decision making among water users. These processes can reach consensus on water use targets and pollution controls, which are then allocated to the local administrations within the watershed. Without such an inclusive process and appropriate incentives, there may be less interest in staying within the targets as experienced in the Yellow River case, among others. Finally, institutional reforms are also required at the administrative level. Water and environment management are split, with the water department in charge of water supply and water infrastructure in general, while the environment department is responsible for pollution control in general. Both have overlapping areas of responsibility for water quality control. A further problem is that each department has its own institutional and monitoring system and there is no culture of data sharing. No data sharing among related government departments can lead to disagreements and misunderstandings. Streamlining of responsibilities and greater incentives for cooperation and collaboration and information exchange, piloted in some parts of China, would contribute to achieving national water sector objectives.

Improved solid waste management As incomes rise and more citizens join the urban consumer society, waste volumes in Chinese cities are growing rapidly. The estimated solid waste volume generated in China, including recyclables that are separately collected, was 346 million tons in 2011 (table 7.3), about twice the amount in 2000. Urban residents make up about 55 percent of the population but generate about 80 percent of the total waste amount, or 1.1 kilogram of waste a day, compared with 0.3 kilogram for rural citizens. The average of 0.7 kilogram is similar to other large world cities at comparable incomes. Waste volumes will likely double

521


522

URBAN CHINA

TABLE 7.3 Estimated waste generation levels and main outlets in China, 2011

Population

Total waste Total waste generated by formally collected households & transported (ton/y) (ton/y)

Total waste not collected (ton/y)

Kilograms Total waste disposal in of waste Total waste harmless manner (sanitary Total waste not generated/ separately collected landfill/ incinerator/ properly collected/ person/ (=recyclables) (ton/y) composted) (ton/y) disposed (ton/y) day

Urban 722 million (55%)

281 million

219 million

14 million (50% of waste in towns)

48 million (20%)

177 million1

56 million

1.07

65 million

18 million

41 million

6.5 million (10%)

9 million (no data, estimate 14% of total; 50% of waste collected)

49.5 million

0.31

346 million

237 million

55 million

54.5 million

186 million (cities 131; counties 46; towns+villages 9)

106 million

0.73

Rural 578 million (45%) Total 1.3 billion

Source: NBS 2011a; statistical data from cities and county towns, estimates for towns, and calculations by the authors.

again by 2030. To ensure a sustainable waste management sector in China’s growing cities, collection fees need to rise to full coverage everywhere, waste segregation and recycling must be improved, and safe disposal of the remaining waste ensured. Achieving these objectives will also require changing the way waste management is fi nanced. Municipal waste management has high marginal operating costs and is therefore different from other services such as water supply and sewage collection, which have high fixed up-front costs but relatively lower operating costs (Hoornweg and Bhada-Tata 2012). Comparable costs in China vary widely. For example, in Shanghai rates are RMB 120 a ton for collection and transport and RMB 90 a ton for disposal in landfi ll or RMB 240 a ton for incineration. In Kunming, rates are RMB 90 a ton for collection and transport and RMB 90 a ton for incineration. Despite high operational costs, households are typically not charged for formal waste removal. Instead, costs are covered through general spending. Waste management is therefore underfunded in many cities, leading to poor performance. For example, incinerators with insufficient gate fees often operate with low temperatures and bad flue gas treatment, leading to environmental problems.

Total national waste management fees were only RMB 4.4 billion in 2011, while national investment in fixed assets for waste treatment was RMB 19.9 billion and—assuming overall management costs (collection, transfer and transport, final disposal) of at least RMB 250 a ton—total municipal solid waste costs were likely no less than RMB 40 billion in 2011 for formal cities. These costs are expected to increase tenfold by 2030. A more sustainable fi nancing model would follow international practice in high-income countries and charge households and fi rms the full cost of waste management, even if charges are combined with those for other utilities to ease administration. Such explicit charges would also encourage reduction of waste generation.

Improving the efficiency of municipal solid waste management About 70 percent of the waste is currently formally collected in China, and an estimated 54 percent of the total waste is adequately disposed of in sanitary landfills, incinerators, or composting plants. Average waste collection coverage ranges widely, from approximately 20 percent in rural areas to nearly full coverage in many big cities. The volume of waste incinerated (26 million tons in 2011) has increased rapidly. Another 15 percent is


GREEN URBANIZATION

recycled. The remaining waste (about onethird of the total amount generated) that is not disposed of properly or collected as recyclables, is burned, dumped, or disposed of without special environmental controls. Formally segregation of waste at source organized by local authorities is still rare, but a large informal sector collects and processes valuable recyclables (such as metals, plastics, paper, and appliances). This sector provides income for low-skilled city dwellers, but makes formal recycling of collected waste less profitable. Cities that seek to formalize these systems could integrate currently informal systems or aid informal waste collectors in fi nding alternative livelihoods. In the longer term, China could adapt European models of product stewardship at both national and local level. In such schemes, manufacturers consider the waste implications along the full life-cycle chain of their products, including the use of packaging materials and the fi nal disposal of the product at the end of its useful life. The government could collaborate with industrial sector organizations and introduce voluntarily schemes and incentives that could eventually lead to mandatory regulations. Besides raising the collection and recycling rates, better overall planning and management will boost sector efficiency. First, adopting international practices for master planning of integrated solid waste management systems will avoid overbuilding some parts of the waste management chain and neglecting others. To properly function, the various parts of the waste management chain (collection, transfer, transport, final disposal) need to be well matched and synchronized. Second, introduction of international data monitoring and financial accounting practices for solid waste management would better reveal the true costs of the waste management chain. About 50 percent of waste volumes are estimated simply by truck counting, meaning that large volumes of waste streams are poorly recorded, and tools for analysis at the national level are inadequate. Accounting practices are also often insufficient. Even at the local level there is generally little insight into the capital and operating costs of all the components in the waste management chain. As a consequence, costs are routinely under-

estimated. Finally, better planning could yield greater economies of scale. Smaller cities, where geographically possible, could cooperate with adjacent jurisdictions to develop more efficient and well-operated waste management facilities such as landfi lls or incinerators. Unfortunately, despite the potential cost savings, such cooperation is still uncommon in China.

Reducing pollution impacts from municipal solid waste disposal More efficient management can greatly reduce, but not eliminate, the amount of waste produced in China that requires disposal. Municipal waste disposal is a challenge for many local governments because volumes are rising and land is scarce. To improve the waste disposal system and reduce its environmental impacts, the national and local governments need to implement improvements across the entire waste chain—many of which have already been outlined in the 12th Five-Year Plan. One priority is to streamline administration by introducing greater independence and accountability for local EPB staff charged with oversight, clarify the roles between the Ministries (or Bureaus at local level) of Housing, Urban and Rural Development and of Environmental Protection, and reform technical standards and sector guidelines. As an example of the need for better standards and enforcement, during incinerator operation there is often no proper testing, treatment, or disposal of fly and bottom ashes, which causes local pollution problems. Beijing provides a good model for an improved waste disposal system. The city has invested in greater supervision of landfill and incineration operations with an institution responsible for monthly inspections. It developed standards for inspection and assessment of operational performance, which have resulted in improved environmental performance. Cities should also integrate waste management facilities into land use planning. In the planning process, environmental impact assessments and permitting are currently treated as a formality rather than a regulatory tool. China currently also lacks hydrogeological information and know-how of

523


524

URBAN CHINA

contaminant hydrogeology, and these factors are therefore not sufficiently considered in landfi ll site selection and design. Finally, local governments need to properly rehabilitate or close unsanitary landfills in a way that minimizes long-term environmental impacts and allows eventual return of the land to productive uses. Some cities, such as Beijing and Wenzhou, have completely removed old waste disposal sites by excavating the waste, sorting it, and then transporting the light portion to a newly built sanitary landfill or incinerator. The remaining soil with some organic humus can then be used in gardens and parks. The cost of this restoration could be paid for from the increased land value of the site after it has been cleaned up for redevelopment.

A more sustainable waste management sector At current growth projections, proposals for continued investments of RMB 264 billion for solid waste management are in line with the ambitions to reach satisfactory levels of waste collection, develop sufficient waste disposal outlets that meet international good practice standards, and introduce waste minimization and recycling schemes. The key challenge will be to match the investments with the operational budgets needed to manage these waste systems and to gradually move toward greater cost recovery through user charges for these services. Fees currently make up only about 10 percent of the RMB 40 billion needed to run waste operations, and these costs will further increase substantially due to the planned investments, the growth in GDP, and the urbanization process.

Cities where a billion people want to live and work Three decades of economic growth brought great welfare improvements to China, but at the cost of unsustainable resource consumption and pollution. China’s leaders have recognized that resource depletion and pollution have become a costly barrier to further development. And with rising prosperity, China’s urban residents expect a future that includes clear water and blue skies. The ultimate causes of China’s environmental prob-

lems are institutional rather than technical. The main problems are inadequate resources, ineffective organization, limited channels for public participation, and insufficient incentives for environmental management. China’s leaders can strengthen green governance by focusing on the following reforms that have been discussed in this report: • Increase resources and enhance authority for environmental management to support more staff who promote greening and enforce environmental rules. Strengthen data collection and widely disseminate information to better monitor compliance, which is necessary regardless of the policy instruments used. • Revise the cadre evaluation system, so local leaders have a greater incentive to pursue environmental objectives and focus on quality of life of their citizens, while allowing some flexibility to adapt green goals to local conditions. • Allow greater public participation in holding polluters to account. Citizens, nongovernmental environmental groups, and the media can all assist the government in ensuring that ambitious environmental rules are followed. Public disclosure of environmental performance shames companies into cleaning up. And the legal system can complement government enforcement if current experiments with environmental courts and tribunals are expanded and formalized. • Rebalance environmental policy instruments toward more market-based tools such as taxes and trading systems, possibly for carbon and energy use if appropriate measurement and verification systems can be established and new mechanisms calibrated with existing policies—while enforcing well-designed regulations where price signals are insufficient. Without strengthening green governance, necessary changes in resource- and pollution-intensive sectors will be difficult, if not impossible, because it is the application of green governance principles in sector policies that will encourage cleaner and resourceefficient growth. As this chapter has shown,


GREEN URBANIZATION

local environmental agencies need greater resources to encourage greening and to ensure compliance with environmental rules in the energy, transport, buildings, water, and waste management sectors. In particular, water resource and air pollution management need regional management mechanisms. Public participation and stronger legal mechanisms are most important in holding polluters to account but will also help gain greater acceptance for efficiency investments. Across all sectors, the basic principle for environmental policy design is to rely as much as possible on market or price instruments, which provide the incentives for firms and households to seek efficient ways to go green. China has raised some resource prices, but must also do so for others such as water. China is also exploring carbon taxes and carbon trading, and similar mechanisms could also work for water. Regulations will be effective where price instruments are not sufficient, for instance where harmful pollution must be urgently stopped or where behavioral issues blunt price instruments. Finally, in some cases, the government will need to provide investments or financial support, for instance to fi nance pilots and to collect and disseminate information about what works in resource efficiency and pollution control; or more directly to make public transit an attractive alternative or to make building energy investments financially viable. Technical measures across the sectors that make firms and households more resource efficient and reduce pollution are known. The core message is that sustainable sector practices are compatible with green sector policies. Although there are important nonfi nancial barriers, investments in efficiency

tend to be financially cost-effective even when ignoring broader ecological and health benefits, but deeper efficiency improvements to achieve greener ambitions will need smart incentives and mandates. Pollution abatement is a cost to firms that essentially must pay for a service—removal of harmful byproducts into air, water, or soils—that they previously received for free. Nevertheless, many barriers still prevent these measures from happening, and a combination of both enforced regulation as well as market-based approaches is needed. But the high social benefits justify the imposition of stricter emission standards, and fi rms can often achieve pollution reductions most cheaply through efficiency improvements or productivity enhancing capital upgrading. China could also find it easier to make needed sector investments than many other emerging and developing countries that face severe environmental problems. It has the technical expertise among academics and professionals and a growing green industrial sector that can supply the needed technology. As China 2030 report pointed out, there are large business opportunities in an ambitious green transformation. Countries such as Germany have shown that rising environmental standards encourage domestic industries to innovate, developing clean technology that is now exported around the world. Despite the needed rebalancing of the economy away from low-value industries, China will retain a large manufacturing sector. The examples of Germany, Switzerland, and Sweden, but also the Republic of Korea, for instance, shows that this rebalancing can be compatible with becoming a green growth leader whose cities top quality-of-life rankings.

525


526

URBAN CHINA

Annex 7A

Smart Greening

The foundation of green governance is credible, transparent, and publicly available data. With China’s cities collectively growing by about 15 million people a year, traditional city management methods are being challenged. This report proposes some new approaches, but the lifeblood of new management methods will be data and how it is used. Improved data collection, management and dissemination should be able to improve the carrying capacity of cities’ growing populations. There is no universal defi nition of a “smart” city, but greater use of information technology (IT) can benefit cities in the following ways: Promoting a more service-oriented government, moving away from traditional command and control approaches. Smart infrastructure moves information in both directions between government and its citizens. Two-way communication improves interaction and proactivity, and develops greater understanding. For instance, applications of smart technologies could reduce traffic congestion by providing greater logistical information and knowledge to travelers. Social media can help disseminate information in the public’s interest and promote environmental awareness, while at the same time allowing for feedback in near real time. Stimulating innovation in high-tech and information technologies. Information technologies as simple as metering and information systems can transform an industry like district heating through consumption-based billing or distributed generation in the power sector. Enhancing public services and people’s quality of life. Because the market still does not deliver many public services, information asymmetry is prevalent. Applying e-commerce principles to e-government can deliver public services more efficiently to a large and growing urban population. Greater public disclosure of pollution discharges and air and water quality can support market-based approaches by raising people’s awareness and stimulating demand for green lifestyles, ser-

vices, and products. Vulnerable groups like the growing number of elderly residents will also stand to benefit from information on pollution to help them protect their health. Medical specialists could also be accessed through remote service models. There are many examples of smart city applications. For instance, Singapore has relieved traffic congestion despite having nearly two cars per resident by implementing an electronic pricing system for traffic congestion. When the system was fi rst put in place in 1998, data collection was done by person. Now, traffic is monitored by sensors and infrared equipment installed on roadways. With this real-time data, citizens can check traffic conditions using their mobile phones or on-board global positioning systems in vehicles. Average vehicle traffic dropped by about 25,000 vehicles during rush hours and traffic flow improved by 20 percent. Cities worldwide have used different approaches to constructing smart technologies for cities ranging from government investment and operation to outsourcing. Full funding by government has applied mainly to services such as fire prevention and emergency warning systems that are supplied exclusively by public entities (as in New York). For other services such as video monitoring, some cities, such as Singapore, Hong Kong SAR, China, and Shenzhen, have handed over operations to commercial companies. In these cases, the government typically finances the capital investment and part of the operating costs while the operator’s price is negotiated through a competitive bidding process. Cities vary as to how much risk and control of operations they pass onto commercial companies. Because China is still far behind in collecting basic data for many public services, leapfrogging to a big-data, smart-city concept is still an ambitious prospect. At this initial stage, Chinese cities should study the experience of other cities—both at home and abroad—with big data systems. But there are some areas in which immediate action can and should be taken, for example in metering district heating and water use. Government guidance should be developed to


GREEN URBANIZATION

avoid impractical applications of data and plan ahead for how different systems might be integrated in the future. Currently, the highly fragmented nature of data collected for public services is a major challenge for Chinese cities. Planning for better integration can help cities realize synergies in realizing cross-sector objectives such as the integrated management of the environment and water resources. It also makes it possible to use a more complete set of indicators for assessing the progress of city management. Beyond data collection, investing in smart applications in public services can help to unleash efficiencies—but with technologies comes a need to ensure public service managers actually use these enhancements and act on them. As they build smarter cities, local governments in China will need to walk a fi ne line between providing public oversight of e-services and data systems and constricting a highly innovative IT market. In many cases, the market has solved problems on its own. Value-added services such as mobile Inter-

net apps to hail taxis or map current traffic have boomed without government support, reducing wait times and traffic congestion. Yet, even with greater use of IT technologies, the government will continue to play a very important role in traditional public services, especially to ensure appropriate data and reporting for regulated services. Incentives will be needed for adopting smarter systems especially in utilities such as heating and water, which tend to be more conservative and face fi nancing constraints. Strict public oversight will be needed for services involving the use of sensitive information such as personal medical records. The government should ensure norms and standards for information security are clear and enforced while guarding against creating roadblocks where the disclosure of information is in the public interest, for example, in monitoring pollution or assessing environmental impacts of projects. With the right balance, local governments in China can create smart cities that are greener, more efficient, and better serve the people.

Annex 7B Illustrative framework and analytical tools for urban energy and emissions reduction planning While traditional energy sector planning is essential, leading cities around the world have started to coordinate these traditional sectors to achieve specific, ambitious emission reduction objectives. As major consumers of both benefits of energy use and its environmental consequences, cities have an interest in least cost paths to accelerated greening. While there are many similar approaches, this annex illustrates a model framework for planning, drawing on the Sustainable Energy and Emissions Planning (SUEEP) process that was developed by the World Bank through its experience working with cities in its East Asia and Pacific Region (World Bank 2012) (figure 7B.1). It also highlights some methods and tools Chinese municipal authorities could use in managing their cities’ energy use and associated emissions of pollution. It concludes by demonstrating the need for cross-sector approaches and identifying and overcoming challenges.

Securing commitment A key piece of advice for the ambitious mayor preparing to set out on the energy and emissions planning process is to focus on creating the enabling conditions for planning (box 7B.1). As experts experienced in urban energy and emissions planning have noted, securing commitment by city leaders at the beginning of the planning process is another key to success. What this means is making sure relationships can be built across agencies and across sectors, which would not normally interact. Establishing trust between municipal stakeholders—including energy, transportation, construction, and environmental protection agencies—is needed to encourage them to share their data, time, and resources. Involving these stakeholders at an early stage is also important because they will eventually be responsible for carrying out recommended actions.53

527


528

URBAN CHINA

FIGURE 7B.1 An example of the energy and emissions planning process

2. Diagnostics and benchmarking

1. Commitment

3. Target setting

responsible for energy end use and emissions by the city. Also, overall measures may be biased by the structure of the urban economy, population, climate conditions, and other factors, creating the need for bottom-up, sectorlevel indicators of energy end-use and emissions (Price and others 2013; Zhou and others 2012). Examples of bottom-up indicators for the urban transport sector and proposed benchmarks are shown in (table 7B.1).

4. Prioritizing actions

Target setting and prioritizing actions 6. Monitoring and review

5. Implementing

Source: Based on World Bank 2012.

Diagnostics and benchmarking Diagnostics entail an assessment of how well the city is currently doing and where it could do better. Elements of conducting a baseline assessment include selection of indicators, a bottom-up inventory of energy use and GHG emissions, and benchmarking to identify under-performing sectors and potential opportunities for improvement. Hundreds of cities around China have put forward goals for becoming green, low carbon, or eco-friendly (sheng tai), but what it actually means to be a green, low-carbon, or eco-city is much less clear in practice (Price and others 2013; Zhou and Williams 2013).54 Indicators bring operational clarity to goals and provide a concrete basis for cities to measure baseline performance, compare their performance against that of peer cities or best-practice standards, evaluate their potential for improvement, establish targets, and assess their progress over time. Aggregated indicators such as energy use per unit of GDP and per capita CO2 emissions are commonly used to evaluate provincial and local city governments in reducing their energy use and emissions. While these topdown, macro-level indicators give a sense of a city’s overall progress, they do not provide a detailed picture of which sectors are most

Once reliable data and measurements are obtained, and key problems identified, strategic objectives and goals can be determined. Understanding the technical feasibility and incremental costs of abatement measures will help establish the technical and affordable abatement potential cities can strive for. Do cities promote micro-turbines or rooftop solar PV, or do they place their efforts more on importing green electricity? These questions can be answered through this process, but with strong technical support from sector specialists who understand the specific resource potential for cities. Changning District in Shanghai offers an example of priority setting for energy planning based on strong analytics (box 7B.2; World Bank ESMAP 2013). Having identified potential energy savings and measures for reducing carbon emissions, experts grouped options into three categories: • “Do it now” or “no-regret” options that are low-cost and are easy to implement • Options to “start now, then accelerate” that are either low-cost but difficult to implement or higher-cost but easy to implement and that can be piloted now and then scaled up over the medium term as technologies mature • Options to “develop now, and capture over time” that come with high costs and significant implementation challenges but have high abatement potential, which can be studied and possibly piloted With these options, scenarios were developed to assess how far the city could “stretch” to achieve carbon emission reduc-


GREEN URBANIZATION

BOX 7B.1 New York PlaNYC 2030 case study: Integrated centralized planning relying on decentralized delivery The population of America’s largest city, New York City, is expected to grow by 1 million people by 2030 and will place additional stress on existing infrastructure and resources, including energy. Faced with this challenge, the city embarked on a long-term planning process called PlaNYC 2030 to devise strategies to reduce material and energy use, improve natural spaces, plan for and mitigate the effects of climate change, and create a more equitable and engaged society. Strategies were designed and are being executed by a joint task force, led by a specially designated mayoral office and comprised of 25 city departments and stakeholders from state and federal agencies, businesses, and non-profit groups. To strengthen local ownership of the plan, the task force has engaged in media outreach efforts and offered incentives and support to encourage active participation by local business owners and residents, including grant programs and changes in zoning codes intended to create new development opportunities (ICLEI-NYC 2010). The plan is now in its fourth year of implementation. The energy and emissions strategy for PlaNYC is focused on achieving a goal of reducing city-wide GHG emissions by 30 percent in 2030 compared to 2005. Because buildings contribute to 75 percent of the city’s total carbon emissions, PlaNYC has kickstarted a number ambitious programs and policies to improve energy efficiency in the city’s building stock.

This buildings effort has two major elements: the promulgation of new laws (together called the Green, Greater Buildings Plan [GGBP]) and the formation of the 200-person Green Codes Task Force (GCTF) to recommend code and other reforms to reduce a number of environmental impacts of buildings (i.e., not just energy use) (NYC 2011). The GGPB requires regular energy audits, retro-commissioning, and data sharing for large public and private buildings; lighting upgrades; and sub-metering of government buildings and commercial tenant spaces. These measures will impact more than half of the space in 16,000 buildings in the city. To ensure compliance, procedural incentives exempt from retro-commissioning and audits buildings that adopt measures early or comply with LEED for Existing Buildings, a revolving retrofit loan fund has been created with federal stimulus funds, and the City is forming a large ESCO. So far, the city is making notable progress in implementing the GGPB and PlaNYC. The city estimates that nearly 70 percent of private building owners have submitted energy use data (Levine and others 2012), energy-efficiency program funding has increased sixfold in recent years, and 10 percent of the city budget is now committed to energy efficiency. The city plans to further increase energy efficiency investments through public contracting (ICLEI-NYC 2010; NYC 2011) and to roll out new programs for efficiency improvements in small and medium buildings.

Source: Adapted from Zhou and Williams 2013.

TABLE 7B.1 “Green” and “low-carbon” indicators for the transport sector in Chinese cities Indicator

Benchmark

Source

Public transit network penetration (km of network per km2 of city area) Share of public transit trips in total passenger trips (%)

4 km/km2

Upper end of China national target for transport planning (Code GB 50220-95) 12FYP for Transport System target for cities with 10 million people or more MOHURD public transportation demonstration project Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory expert team assessment

Access to public transportation (share of built area within 500 meters of public transit) Municipal fleet improvement (portion of electric, hybrid, biofuel, and compact [<1.6 L] cars in public vehicle and taxi fleet)

60% 90% 100%

Source: Drawn from indicators included in the ELITE Cities benchmarking tool for Chinese cities (He and others 2013).

tions beyond baseline targets in the current Five-Year-Plan and become a leader for lowcarbon city development. Critically, stakeholder consultations are especially important to establish needed

buy-in from citizens, businesses, and other concerned parties whose understanding and support will be needed for implementation. Feedback on targets, program design, affordability, implementing arrangements and so

529


530

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7B.2

Heat cascading in the Rotterdam Energy Approach and Planning

The Rotterdam Energy Approach and Planning (REAP) is part of the Rotterdam Climate Initiative, which aims to halve the level of CO2 emissions in the city by 2025, compared to 1990 levels. This is an ambitious plan which requires ambitious actions in terms of urban energy planning. REAP rests upon a simple concept based on re-using waste flows such as wastewater, household and agricultural waste, and residual heat, whilst using renewable energy to satisfy remaining demand. REAP incentivizes urban planners to search urban areas for opportunities to exchange energy. For instance, in the area of Rotterdam near the World Trade Centre, many new homes, offices and a second shopping mall and supermarkets are all forthcoming. All of these buildings have their own heating and cooling needs and produce residual energy flows that can be “exchanged.� For instance, supermarkets must continually operate cooling systems which produce huge amounts of heat that, if not reused, simply disappears into the atmosphere. Within the REAP framework, heat pumps transfer this residual heat to nearby homes and buildings. This principle of heat cascading also allows for the exchange of heat between offices and homes. On hot days, for instance, office air conditioning units roar into action, yet the heat that is produced in this process is wasted. Within the REAP framework, this heat is stored, for instance in underground aquifer layers (heat and cold storage) for inter-seasonal exchange (and then used to heat homes during the winter months) or in tanks for covering diurnal or weekly differences. REAP strategy was applied in Hart van Zuid, an existing district in Rotterdam, where urban planning calls for homes (to be built near a shopping center) that can use the residual heat generated by a local supermarket. The Ikazia Hospital, which is located nearby and consumes huge amounts of energy, is

also being modified to be energy self-dependent by reclaiming heat from residual hot air and water, while also becoming much better insulated by means of an overarching climate façade which resembles a huge greenhouse covered in vegetation. REAP framework requires a substantial amount of infrastructure changes. For instance, small communal facilities must be built to store and redistribute energy. Moreover, heat pumps and heat storage systems are needed for counter-balancing daily and seasonal temperature changes. The following steps are implemented: Step 00. Make an inventory of the current energy consumption. Step 01. Reduce consumption. New functions will be added: 20,000 square meters shops, 6,000 square meter supermarket. Theatre Zuidplein and the infrastructure intersection will be renewed. Better insulation of the existing shopping centre will in itself already significantly improve the situation. Step 02. Reuse waste streams. The addition of housing will create a better heat-cold balance. The use of the waste heat generated by the supermarket and the typical morning and evening energy consumption in homes means that the match is perfect: A one square-meter supermarket can heat seven square meters of housing. If 665 apartments are added, the heat-cold ratio becomes 1:1.08, assuming that use is made of heat and cold storage. Step 03. Renewable energy generation. The remaining demand for heat can be solved by the addition of greenhouses on the fi rst floor, which could be public areas (or greenhouses for growing tomatoes), or by the addition of PV-panels. PV panels could also be installed on the roof to supply electricity for the whole shopping centre. The remaining energy required could be sustainably generated at a higher scale level.

Source: Salat 2013.

on can be extremely valuable in obtaining buy in to especially ambitious agendas.

Implementing, monitoring and reviewing The quality of the monitoring and reporting process will largely depend on the quality of the data and indicators chosen. Periodic

monitoring and reporting can sound mundane but it is essential to providing feedback and calibrating decisions. Cities should establish a mechanism that is suitable to local conditions and mobilizes timely action using the information that is gather. Online monitoring tools and public disclosure of progress helps to provide needed information that is in the public interest and develops and under-


GREEN URBANIZATION

standing, shoring up support for the abatement measures.

Tools to assist in the planning process A variety of tools have been developed to assist city leaders in the process of urban energy planning. Diagnostic tools which help cities evaluate their performance include the Urban RAM and ELITE Cities tools. Urban RAM (Urban Rapid Assessment Model) evaluates final energy use by consumers in the transportation, residential, and commercial buildings sectors, as well as the embodied energy use in urban infrastructure and consumer goods (Fridley and others 2012). The tool’s explicit accounting of energy embodied in consumer goods reveals the importance of purchasing habits and behavioral changes in shaping a city’s energy and carbon footprint; however, it does not cover energy use and GHG emissions by industry, the dominant urban sector. Urban RAM has been piloted in Suzhou City. ELITE Cities (Eco and LowCarbo Indicator Tool for Evaluating Cities) is a light-touch benchmarking tool that, like Urban RAM, was also developed specially for use by Chinese cities (He and others 2013). ELITE Cities is built on a system of indica-

tors for climate, water, air waste, mobility, economic health, land use, and social health that enable cities to compare their performance against national standards, targets, and best-practice levels of cities in China and abroad. Energy mapping for neighborhood and city-level spatial plans is another example of a cross-sector methodology. Energy mapping enables cities to identify opportunities for harvesting local energy supplies and utilizing flows of “waste” energy. For example, to assist the Hart van Zuid District of Rotterdam in realizing goals for becoming carbon neutral, energy planners used heat mapping to evaluate the possibility of recycling streams of waste heat from a new ice skating rink to supply a nearby swimming pool (box 7B.2). By reducing the pool’s heating demand, planners found that it was possible to supply the residual demand for heat in the neighborhood by installing rooftop solar collectors on buildings (van den Dobbelsteen and others 2012). Additional examples of district-scale energy mapping by Dutch cities are illustrated in figure 7B.2. In the left panel, columns are filled according to the potential for local energy supplies in Rotterdam, including geothermal energy, biomass

FIGURE 7B.2 Examples of energy potential mapping from the Netherlands, Rotterdam and Groningen a. Rotterdam

b. Groningen Residences, holiday homes, spa, tropical paradise, seasonal industry City of heat

Wind turbine park Heat cascading Industry feeds Horticulture feeds Residences Blue energy plant

Tidal plant and blue energy

Inundation plant

Biomass boulevard Bio-plant, bio-refinery, bio-ethanol factory Natural reserves Forestlands and wetlands for CO2 sequestration Source: Broersma and others 2010 (left), and van den Dobbelsteen, Broersma, and Fremouw 2013 (right).

531


532

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7B.3 Benchmarking and energy saving tool for low-carbon cities (BEST-Low Carbon Cities) The Benchmarking and Energy Saving Tool for Low Carbon Cities (BEST-Low Carbon Cities), developed by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, is a decision-support tool designed to help city authorities in China identify and rank strategies that they can pursue improve city-wide energy efficiency and reduce carbon emissions. Adapted from TRACE, BEST-Low Carbon Cities is intended to synthesize, package, and delivery best practices from around the world in a way that is relevant for Chinese city leaders. The BEST-Low Carbon Cities process begins with a quick assessment of a city’s local energy use and carbon emissions in nine sectors: industry, public and commercial buildings, residential buildings, transportation, power and heat, street lighting, water & wastewater, solid waste, and urban green space. The addition of industry (which

was not included in TRACE) is particularly important for China because industries account for 70 percent of urban energy use on average. Performance on key indicators is benchmarked against that of peer cities with similar climate conditions, populations, and levels of development, both inside and outside China, to identify sectors with the greatest potential for saving energy and reducing CO2 emissions. As with TRACE, BEST-Low Carbon Cities then allows city authorities to choose energy and carbon reducing measures from a “playbook” of proven options and to evaluate their appropriateness. By ranking strategies that yield the greatest reductions and are most suited to local circumstances, the tool helps local government officials to develop a low carbon city action plan that can be implemented in phases, over a multi-year timeframe.

Source: Adapted from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory description of BEST-Low Carbon Cities and World Bank author’s interview with Zhou Nan and Lynn Price, 1 August 1, 2013.

and solar energy, to satisfy heat demand. This method of energy mapping allows for city planners to incorporate local energy supply strategies into spatial planning for urban development, as shown for Groningen in the right panel. Other tools link diagnostics with target setting and prioritizing actions, as does TRACE (Tool for Rapid Assessment of City Energy). 55 Developed by the World Bank’s ESMAP, TRACE is intended to assist cities with developing a portfolio of strategies for reducing energy use in six municipal sectors: passenger transport, municipal buildings, water and wastewater, public lighting, solid waste, and power and heat. TRACE enables cities to identify under-performing sectors, evaluate their potential for improvement, and select priorities for action among a menu of proven, cost-reducing measures for improving energy efficiency. Twenty-three cities around the world have deployed TRACE so far, including Rio de Janeiro, which is hosting the 2014 FIFA World Cup and 2016 Olympics, and Belo Horizonte, which is also hosting the 2014 FIFA World Cup. Outputs from TRACE have provided grounding for

a US$ 100-million energy-efficiency investment program by the World Bank in the two cities. The Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is tailoring a new tool, built on the framework of TRACE, designed specifically for Chinese cities (box 7B.3). Like TRACE and BEST-Low Carbon Cities, the MACTool (Marginal Abatement Cost Tool) assists cities with baseline diagnostics, setting targets, and prioritizing actions. 56 MACTool compares the CO2 abatement potentials and costs of deploying a suite of mitigation technologies, allowing users to construct a marginal cost curve for CO2 emissions reductions. National and subnational governments have used MACTool for estimating break-even carbon prices in setting up carbon ETS schemes. Shanghai City’s Changning District has piloted and adapted the underlying methodology behind the MACTool for use in China. Other innovative examples of tools being tailored specifically for Chinese cities include the development of a simplified city-level GHG accounting methodology and redesigned Long-range Energy Alternative Planning System (LEAP) by researchers at Renmin University, which


533

GREEN URBANIZATION

TABLE 7B.2 Illustrative examples of tools to assist city leaders in developing low-carbon plans Benchmarking Energy and Emissions Planning Tools

Process guide

Energy

CO2

Scenarios

MAC Tool World Bank Energy Services Management Assistance Program (ESMAP) TRACE World Bank ESMAP

BEST-Low Carbon Cities Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S.

EFFECT World Bank ESMAP

Urban RAM Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S.

SUEEP World Bank

MCA4climate UNEP

Develop options for action Target setting

Identify

Cost/Impacts

• [a]

Prioritize

Implementation support

• [b]

Climate Compass Compendium of Measures Climate Alliance

A Guidebook for Low-Carbon Development at the Local Level Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S.

Sustainable Energy Planning handbook UNHABITAT, ICLEI

ELITE Cities Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, U.S.

• •

Notes: [a] scenario modeling is not one of the tools in the toolkit, al though the guidance document offers advice on considerations for creating scenarios; [b] marginal abatement costs analyzed for major energy using sectors under different scenarios, MAC curves can be created for technologies in industry sub-sectors.

they used to help Qingdao City craft a lowcarbon development strategy (Wang Ke 2012). The above is not an exhaustive list and other tools may suit specific circumstances (see table 7B.2 for illustrative examples of tools). Further tailoring China-specific tools can help improve the perceived credibility of these tools among city leaders and increase the likelihood that they are utilized.

Cross-sector approaches and methodologies for energy and emissions planning Currently, there is a need for cross-sector planning approaches, methodologies, and tools that account for the interrelated effects of policy choices on energy, water, land, air, and waste in urban systems. Such tools can improve coordination of urban energy plans with master spatial plans and sector policies in industry, buildings, transport,

health, water, and environmental protection. This section highlights two cross-sector approaches and methodologies that can be incorporated into urban energy and emissions planning: climate-friendly air quality management and spatial energy mapping. “Climate-friendly” air quality management (AQM) aims to improve air quality and prevent dangerous climate change by pursuing concurrent reductions in traditional air pollutants and greenhouse gases (James and Schultz 2011, 1). Evidence from around the world supports that designing and implementing coordinated strategies for reducing local air pollution and greenhouse gases is more cost-effective and yields greater economic benefits than pursuing isolated strategies for controlling single pollutants. First, it is usually much cheaper for local governments and businesses to meet regulatory requirements for controlling criteria pollutants such as


534

URBAN CHINA

BOX 7B.4

Climate-friendly air quality management planning in the San Francisco Bay Area

The Clean Air Plan issued by California’s Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) in 2010 is the first AQM plan developed by a local public authority in the United States to take an integrated approach to air quality and climate change. The plan targets four categories of pollutants: ozone, PM 2.5, toxics, and greenhouse gases. The plan aims not only to meet federal and state air quality standards, but also sets long-term goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the district to 1990 levels by 2020 and to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2035. In developing the plan, the BAAQMD estimated public health

impacts from air pollution in recent years and compared the health and climate protection benefits (expressed in dollar terms) of measures to reduce targeted pollutants under different scenarios. The analysis of abatement options included an evaluation of potential trade-offs for control measures that could reduce some pollutants while increasing others. In all, the district estimated that a 1 percent reduction in targeted pollutants would yield $202 million in health benefits, including $158 million in health benefits from avoided PM 2.5 and $29 million in climate protection benefits from avoided greenhouse gases.

Source: BAAQMD 2010.

SO2 and NOx by investing in climate-friendly measures such as improvements in energy efficiency than focusing solely on end-of-pipe controls. The UNDP estimates that China can reduce the costs of meeting its air quality objectives by 60 percent and reduce local air pollution by an even greater margin if it integrates investments in energy efficiency, co-generation, and renewable power generation into local AQM programs (UNDP 2010). Second, accounting for both greenhouse gas mitigation and local AQM impacts can amplify the expected economic benefits of policy choices that may not appear to be costbeneficial if impacts on local pollutants or greenhouse gases are considered in isolation. The United Kingdom’s environmental agency estimated that measures to increase uptake of low-emission vehicles by consumers would cost around 72 million per year and provide annual benefits of 61 million from avoided air pollution. If avoided CO2 emissions were also considered, however, total benefits would be around 163 million, a much better deal (UK DEFRA 2007, 12). China’s central government has already embraced the basic principles of climatefriendly AQM in calling for an integrated, multi pollutant approach to reducing air pollution in key regions (James and Schultz 2011). 57 The main tasks for outline cities in the 12th Five-Year Plan for Prevention and Control of Air Pollution include measures with significant climate change co-benefits,

such as expanding clean energy supply, limiting direct coal use, eliminating small and inefficient boilers, and encouraging cogeneration of heat and electricity (State Council 2012). New requirements for cities to develop AQM plans in the 12th Five-Year Plan—and mandatory targets for local governments to reduce their carbon intensity—thus present an opportunity. As they formulate their plans, cities in the key air pollution regions should seek to maximize co-benefits by beginning to consider the impacts of climate change mitigation as part of a multi-pollutant strategy. This requires a city greenhouse gas emissions inventory and an explicit accounting of climate co-benefits as part of the evaluation of abatement options. The accounting of climate co-benefits would in effect be an extension of the cost-benefit or costeffectiveness analysis recommended by the World Bank and MEP for strengthening the AQM planning process under current ministry guidelines (see World Bank-MEP 2012). California’s San Francisco Bay Area offers an example of how local governments may take a multi-pollutant, climate-friendly approach to AQM planning (box 7B.4).

Identifying and overcoming challenges to urban energy and emissions reduction planning Data availability is one of the main challenges preventing Chinese cities from using


GREEN URBANIZATION

tools to develop low-carbon action plans. 58 Tools such as Urban RAM and MACTool have been piloted in larger Chinese cities with extensive resources and analytic capabilities, but may be more difficult to employ in smaller cities. Investing in technical capacity, including better data collection, monitoring, and reporting, is absolutely critical for cities to be able to manage their energy use and emissions and make informed decisions about reduction strategies. In addition, most local city governments—both small and large—will probably not develop their energy and emissions plans entirely on their own. They will likely seek outside help or outsource some of the key analytic tasks to experts. Thus, energy and emissions planning also depends on building up China’s technical service industry and expanding public assistance programs for cities completing energy and emissions action plans During implementation, fi nding champions of multi sector solutions and then identifying financing to implement them are some of the challenges for getting actions off the ground. Examples presented in this report such as in New York City or Stockholm offer ideas for how city leaders could facilitate conversion of plans into actions. Public information of the plan and the objectives also helps to keep the agencies accountable for implementation. As in the case of Changning District in Shanghai, retrofitting commercial buildings would not happen on its own. A specific set of policy measures including targets and provision of financing through a World Bank loan were organized as a package of measures that are intended to facilitate implementation. Understanding the financial viability and nonfinancial barriers of the measures is critical for targeted and effective government support.

Notes 1. “Polluted” or “seriously polluted” water is Grade IV or below, according to China’s Environmental Water Quality Standard (GB3838-2002). 2. One reason for these higher estimates is that they include both rural and urban areas, making use of satellite data available for the entire country. Another is that they use a new

dose-response function more appropriate for China’s very high pollution concentrations and a lower minimum threshold between air pollution exposure and health effects. 3. h t t p : / / e p p . e u r o s t a t . e c . e u r o p a . e u /statistics_explained /index.php /Environmental_protection_expenditure. 4. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/30/world/ asia/cost-of-environmental-degradation-inchina-is-growing.html; http://www.cleanbiz. asia/news/chinas-revived-green-gdp-programstill-faces-challenges. 5. Information was provided by MEP. See also Kaiser and Liu (2009). 6. Information was provided by MEP. This total includes 46,000 provincial, municipal, and county EPB staff plus 146,000 staff in affi liated institutes at each administrative level. 7. X iao X iang Morning Post (㻯㸀㘐㉍), “Media Investigation Finds Polluting Industries are Income Source for Local EPBs” (⨺ỻ宫㞍➢⯪䍗ᾅ⯨烉㰉㝻ẩ᷂ㆸᷢ℞㓞ℍ 㜍㸸), Xinhua News online, April 16, 2013, http://news.xinhuanet.com/yuqing/201304/16/c_124587694.htm (Chinese). 8. The management of pollution fees has been revised over the past few years so that salaries are paid out of a “basic fund” that is separate from a “project fund.” Pollution fees are sent to the local finance bureau. EPBs can then apply to get back part of that money to finance particular environmental projects but not salaries. But, as indicated in the Xinhua article, this practice may not be followed by all EPBs. 9. This includes agencies such as the economic commission, and the land resources, transportation, and construction bureaus, which through their decisions and actions have a large influence on environmental quality. 10. ht t p: // w w w. ch i n ad i a lo g ue . ne t /a r t icle /show/single/en/5438-Officials-strugglingto-respond-to- China-s-year-of-environment-protests- and http:// blogs.cfr.org /asia/2013/05/20/chinas-environmentalpolitics-a-game-of-crisis-management/. 11. “ C h i n a ’ s P r o p o s e d R e v i s i o n s t o E nv i ron ment a l Protec t ion L aw Draw M i x e d R e v i e w s ,” B l o o m b e r g / B N A , J u l y 17, 2 013 , h t t p : // w w w. b n a . c o m /chinas-proposed-revisions-n17179875568/. 12. “The 10 most secretive cities were Zaozhuang in Shandong, Datong and Yangquan in Shanxi, Xiangyang in Hubei, Karamay in Xinjiang, Changchun and Jilin city in Jilin, Zhangjiajie in Hunan, Jinzhou in Liaoning and Ordos in Inner Mongolia. Forty cit-

535


536

URBAN CHINA

13.

14.

15.

16.

17. 18.

19.

ies scaled back their information disclosure last year, with Wuhu in Anhui, Foshan and Shantou in Guangdong, Baoding in Hebei, Taizhou in Zhejiang, Changzhou in Jiangsu, Anshan and Dalian in Liaoning, Weifang in Shandong and Yinchuan in Ningxia the most regressive.” Stephen Chen, “Most Chinese Cities Hiding Vital Pollution Data from Public,” South China Morning Post, March 29, 2013, http://www.scmp.com/news/china /article/1202211/most-chinese-cities-hidingvital-pollution-data-public. Barbara Finamore, “A Step Forward for Environmental Transparency in China,” S W iTC H B OA R D, Nat u ra l Re sou rce s Defense Council Staff Blog, 29 March 2013, http://switchboard.nrdc.org /blogs /bfinamore/a_step_forward_for_environment.html. The average spot price at China’s northern seaports in 2012 was around RMB 650. Estimates of tax burden were based on a look at the fi nancial reporting of 12 large publicly listed firms (China Energy Network, June 20, 2013, http://www.cmen.cc/2013/coal_0620/49560 .html). National Energy Administration, “Establishing a Modern Tax System for Coal” (⺢䩳䍘 ẋ䄌䁕䦶峡⇞⹎), reposted from Economic Daily (乷㳶㖍㉍), March 21, 2013, http:// www.nea.gov.cn/2013-03/21/c_132251142. htm; Xinhua, “Reducing Burden on Coal Industry by Clearing Up Fees and Reforming Taxes” (䄌䁕埴᷂ⅷ峇 慵⛐“㶭峡”“㬋䦶”), reposted from Economic Daily (乷㳶㖍㉍), March 21, 2013, http://news.xinhuanet.com/ energy/2013-03/21/c_124485886.htm . Xie Jiu, “Difficulties and the Way Forward in a World of RMB 8.00 Gasoline” (㱡ẟġ“8 ⃫㖞ẋ”䘬⚘⯨ᶶ↢嶗). Life Week (ᶱ俼䓇㳣), March 28, 2012, http://www.lifeweek.com .cn / 2012 / 0328/36802 .sht m l (accessed December 2013). Other studies, such as the Stern Review (Stern 2007), come up with higher estimates. Kang Sun, “Atmospheric Ammonia and the Air Quality of the North China Plain,” P r i n c e ton U n iver sit y, C h i n a E n er g y Group, http://www.princeton.edu/~puceg/ perspective/Atmospheric_ Ammonia.html (accessed December 2013). An example of a method of nesting different levels of resolution is the RAINS and GAINS models of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (see, for example, “The RAIS 7.2 Model of Air Pollution: General Overview,” http://webarchive.iiasa

20. 21. 22.

23.

24.

25.

26.

27.

28.

29.

.ac.at / Research / TA P/rains_europe/intro .html, accessed December 2013). The GAINS model can also be applied to combine cobenefits between local air pollution and greenhouse gas reductions (Liu, F., and others 2013). This section draws extensively from Salat (2013). This section draws from Ollivier and others (2013). Wu Hongpo, “Wuhan trapped in public parking lots: 45 out of 70 are facing delays” (㬎㯱℔ℙ 弎⛢星⚘⯨ġ 70 ᷒校䚖45᷒“晦 ṏ”), Chutian Jin Bao (㤂⣑慹㉍),7 March 2013, http://hb.qq.com/a/20130703/003378. htm (accessed June 2013). Li Shaoyi, “With Traffic Jams in Beiji ng C omes H ig h L evels of Poll u t i o n f r o m Ve h i c u l a r E x h a u s t ” ( ⊿ Ṕ 㰥 弎 ⯦㮼 㰉 㝻 ᷍ 慵烉椾 ⟝ Ờ 昷 䛨 椾 㭺). Di Yi Ca iji ng R ibao (䫔ᶨ峊乷㖍 ㉍), ht t p: //f i n a nc e . si n a . com . c n /ch i n a /dfjj/20130116/011014295729.shtml. Jing Bao, “Vehicular Exhaust Accounts for 30% of Shenzhen’s PM 2.5 Emissions” (㰥弎⯦㮼⌈㶙⛛PM 2 .5㜍㸸ᶱㆸ), http:// news. sz news.com /content / 2012 - 01 /11 /content_6383292_2.htm. North Central Texas Council of Governments, “Regional Emissions Enforcement Program,” http://www.nctcog.org/trans/air /hevp/reeptx.asp (accessed December 2013). European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association, “ACEA Tax Guide 2012—More Governments Introduce Incentives,” 2012, http://www.acea.be/news/news_detail/tax_ guide_2012_incentives_increase_further/ (accessed December 2013). Hunts Point Clean Trucks Program, “Frequently Asked Questions,” http://www.hunts pointctp.com/faq.html#overview (accessed December 2013). U.S. Green Building Council, “LEED for Neighborhood Development,” http://www .usgbc.org/neighborhoods. Averages are based on reported performance statistics for 269 utilities in the International Benchmarking Network for Water and Sanitation Utilities (IB-NET) database, http:// www.ib-net.org /en/ (accessed August 9, 2013). China’s cities treat an average of 108 million cubic meters of wastewater a day, as estimated according to the total volume of municipal wastewater that MOHURD reported being treated during the fi rst quarter of 2012 (MOHURD 2012). Average


GREEN URBANIZATION

30. 31.

32.

33.

34.

35.

electricity consumption per cubic meter of wastewater treated is 0.254 kilowatt hours, based on a survey of more than 1,800 facilities conducted in 2009 (Liu and Jiang 2012). Assuming an average electricity price of RMB 0.78 per kWh (the average for industrial users in 36 medium and large sized cities in 2012 as reported by the NDRC’s Pricing Bureau). Cost savings are a gross, order-of-magnitude estimate intended to illustrate potential, not necessarily actual, room for improvement. Savings do not account for annualized costs of investments required to improve efficiency or for variations in climate, city, or plant characteristics that influence energy use per unit of wastewater treated. This section draws from Taylor, Sall, and Draugelis (2013). The “secondary sector” corresponds to ISIC divisions 10-45 in the International Standard Industrial Classification system (ISIC Revision 3) and is composed of mining; manufacturing; construction; and electricity, water, and gas utilities. GDP is reported on a value-added basis. Urban industrial GDP and employment numbers reported here are for the 287 municipalities at the prefecture level. An “urban area” is the downtown area directly under the jurisdiction of the municipality and excludes outlying areas within the administrative boundaries of the municipality (NBS 2011b). The share of industry in GDP for urban areas in 2010 was slightly higher than the national average, which was 47 percent (NBS 2011a, 2011b). Total industrial energy demand is projected to rise from around 1,500 million tons of coal equivalent (Mtce) in 2010 to around 2,500 Mtce in 2030, with industry continuing to be the largest end-user of energy in China’s economy (Fridley and others 2012; see also Zhou and others 2011). From an administrative point of view, China has many different kinds of cities. The role of cities in the system of policies for industrial energy efficiency varies with their administrative rank. For the sake of discussion, the term “local city governments” is used in this section to refer mainly to cities at the prefecture level. X i n hua, “Draw i ng t he B ow on C oal Resource Tax Reform” (䄌䁕峬㸸䦶㓡朑䭕 ⛐⻎ᶲ), June 9, 2013, http://news.xinhuanet .com/energy/2013-06/09/c_124835728.htm (accessed December 2013). Recommendations on policy coordination of carbon ETS, revenue recycling to fi nance

36.

37.

38.

39.

40. 41. 42.

43.

44.

energy efficiency, and energy-related targets and caps benefited from written contributions by Max Dupuy, Regulatory Assistance Project, Beijing, May 2013. See Goldberg, Reinaud, and Taylor (2011) for an analysis of policies adopted in different countries to promote EnMS. Institute for Industrial Productivity, “China: Energy Management System Requirements under the Top-10,000 Program,” Industrial Efficiency Programs Database, http://www .iipnetwork.org/databases/programs/energymanagement-system-requirements-under-top10000-program (accessed August 7, 2013). See also Zhu (2012). Despite the apparent improvements, Levine and others (2012, 103) note “there are uncertainties about the accuracy and representativeness of MOHURD’s officially reported compliance rates.” An alternative and competing green building rating system relative to the GBES in China is the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), an internationally recognized rating system originated in the Unied States. A comparison of the two rating systems indicates more similarities than differences and fi nds the GBES to be more rigorous (Levine and others 2012). Team interview with U.S. Green Building Council senior staff, October 1, 2013. This section draws on World Bank (2012b). Supplying gas for individual space and water heating units in residences would require a larger supply. Estimates assume that per capita usage for households connected to gas remains about the same as in 2010. It is also assumed that once households are connected to piped town gas, they will stop using liquified propane gas (LPG). The number of households with access to LPG represents a substantial portion of the urban population in some southern cities in China, although LPG is typically more expensive and households tend to favor piped natural gas. An annual growth rate in the percentage of the urban population with access to piped gas is assumed at 6 percent, slightly faster than the average rate of 3 percent observed between 2004 and 2010. “Breaking the Ice on Natural Gas Pricing Reform” (⣑䃞㮼ẟ㓡䟜⅘), Caijing Magazine (峊乷㛪⽿), January 3, 2012, http://magazine. caijing.com.cn/2012-01-03/111587947.html (accessed December 2013). This section is derived from recent policy notes and other contributions from Xia-

537


538

URBAN CHINA

45. 46. 47. 48.

49.

50. 51. 52.

53.

54.

55.

odong Wang, Senior Energy Specialist, World Bank; Ximing Peng, Senior Energy Specialist, World Bank; Yanqin Song, Energy Specialist, World Bank; and Nourredine Berrah, retired World Bank staff and senior consultant. See the Green Growth Chapter of China 2030 (World Bank–DRC 2013). This section draws on Draugelis and Li (2012) and World Bank (2012a). This section draws from Jiang and Li (2013). FAO, AQUASTAT, “China,” http://www .fao.org/nr/water/aquastat/countries_regions /china/index.stm (accessed December 2014). “China’s underground water in poor condition,” Gov.CN (Chinese Government’s Official Web Portal), May 10, 2012, http:// english.gov.cn/2012-05/10/content_2134183 .htm. This paragraph draws on Moore (2013) and World Bank (2012b). See Qu and others 2012. The analysis was based on national statistical data, individual utility fi nancial statements, data provided by the China Water Supply Association, and previous analysis for up to 699 utilities. Because of data constraints, not all findings covered all these utilities. Author’s interview with Zhou Nan and Lynn Price, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, August 1, 2013; interview with Pedzi Makumbe, World Bank ESMAP, July 29, 2013. Indeed, this problem is not unique to China, as Zhou and Williams (2013) have written in their extensive review of eco-city and low-carbon city concepts and indicators. For words of caution on the need to clarify low-carbon city goals in China, see Zhang Xuan, “200 Cities Propose Establishing LowCarbon City Targets, Blind Development of Targets is a Risk” (200❶ⶪ㍸↢⺢学Ỷ䡛 ❶ⶪ䚖㞯 ㆾ星䚚䚖⍹⯽宗⋢). People’s Daily (Ṣ㮹㖍㉍), June 11, 2012, http://npc.people .com.c n /G B /18138478.ht m l (ac ce ssed December 2013); and “Li Xun: Concept Unclear, Many Low-Carbon Cities Are Only Low-Carbon in Name” (㛶彭烉㤪⾝㧉䱲 Ỷ 䡛❶ⶪ⣂ᷢỒỶ䡛), Caijing Magazine (峊 乷㛪⽿), September 2, 2011,“ http://www .caijing.com.cn/2011-09-02/110838876.html (accessed December 2013). World Bank ESMAP, “Tool for Rapid Assessment of City Energy: Helping Cities Use Energy Efficiently,” https://www.esmap.org /TRACE (accessed December 2013).

56. World Bank ESMAP, “Modeling Tools and E-Learning,” http://esmap.org/MACTool (accessed December 2013). 57. The State Council’s Approval of the 12th FiveYear Plan for Air Pollution Prevention and Control in Key Regions calls for “coordinated actions to control multiple pollutants” and “strengthening holistic management of multiple pollutants” (State Council 2012). 58. Zhou Nan and Lynn Price, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, interview with author, August 1, 2013.

References 2030 Water Resources Group (The Barilla Group, The Coca-Cola Company, IFC, McKinsey & Co., Nestlé S.A, New Holland Agriculture, SABMiller, Standard Chartered Bank, and Syngenta AG). Charting Our Water Future: Economic Frameworks to Inform DecisionMaking. http://www.mckinsey.com /App_ Media/Reports/Water/Charting_Our_Water_ Future_Full_Report_001.pdf. ADB (Asian Development Bank). 2008. Project Completion Report, Scoping Water and Energy Pollution Nexus in Urumqi and Qingdao for Preparing PRC’s Ministry of Environmental Protection Co-Control Program, Asian Development Bank, http://www.adb.org / sites/default/files/Water-Energy-Nexus-Final Report_5.pdf. Bell, M. L., D. L. Davis, and T. Fletcher, T. 2004. “A Retrospective Assessment of Mortality from the London Smog Episode of 1952: The Role of Influenza and Pollution.” Environmental Health Perspectives 112 (1): 6. Bell, R. G., A. McDermott, S. L. Zeger, J. M. Samet, and F. Dominici. 2004. “Clearing the Air: How Delhi Broke the Logjam on Air Quality Reforms.” Environment 46: 22–39. Berrah, N., F. Feng, R. Priddle, and L. Wang 2007. Sustainable Energy in China: Closing Window of Opportunity. Washington, DC: World Bank. Bourdic, Loeiz. 2011. “Urban Density and Private Transport Energy Consumption: From Global Trends to Local Solutions.” MSc thesis, Imperial College, London. Browder, G., S. Xie, Y. Kim, L. Gu, M. Fan, and D. Ehrhardt. 2007. Stepping Up: Improving the Performance of China’s Urban Water Utilities. Washington, DC: World Bank. Cackette, Tom. 2013. “Commercializing ZEVs Based on California’s Experience.” Background note for China: Efficient, Inclusive,


GREEN URBANIZATION

and Sustainable Urbanization, DRC and World Bank, Beijing. Carbon Disclosure Project. 2012. “Measurement for Management: CDP Cities 2012 Global Report.” London, https://www.cdproject.net /cdpresults/cdp-cities-2012-global-report.pdf. Chen, Y., A. Ebstein, M. Greenstone, and H. Li. 2013. “Evidence on the Impact of Sustained Exposure to Air Pollution on Life Expectancy from China’s Huai River Policy.” PNAS Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, http://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/ pnas.1300018110. Cheng, Zhen, Jingkun Jiang, Oscar Fajardo, Shuxiao Wang, and Jiming Hao. 2013. “Characteristics and Health Impacts of Particulate Matter Pollution in China (2001–2011).” Atmospheric Environment 65: 186–94. Chien, Shiuh-Shen. 2013. “New Local State Power through Administrative Restructuring: A Case Study of Post-Mao China County-level Urban Entrepreneurialism in Kunshan.” Geoforum 46: 103–12. China Electric Power Yearbook Committee. 2011. China Electric Power Yearbook 2011 (ᷕ⚥䓝 ≃⸜戜2011). Beijing: China Electric Power Press. China Greentech Initiative. 2012. “The China Greentech Report 2012: Faced With Challenges, China Accelerates Greentech Growth.” Beijing, China, http://www.china-greentech. com/report. City of London. 2011. “Core Strategy: Development Plan Document, Delivering a World Class City.” City of London Corporation, Local Development Framework. http://www .cityoflondon.gov.uk/services/environmentand-planning/planning/planning-policy/localdevelopment-framework/Documents/The%20 Core%20Strategy%20September%202011 .pdf. CNEMC (China National Environmental Monitoring Center). 2013. “2013 Nian Shangban Nian Jingjinii, Changsantiao, Quyu Ji Zhehashi, Shenghui Chengshi He Jihua Danlie Shi Kongqi Zhiliang Baogao.” July 9, 2013. http:// www.cnemc.cn. Creutzig, Felix, and Dongquan He. 2009. “Climate Change Mitigation and Co-benefits of Feasible Transport Demand Policies in Beijing.” Transportation Research, Part D 14: 120–31. Currie, J., and M. Neidell. 2005. “Air Pollution and Infant Health: What Can We Learn from California’s Recent Experience?” Quarterly Journal of Economics 120 (3): 1003–30.

Currie, J., and T. Vogl. 2012. “Early-Life Health and Adult Circumstance in Developing Countries.” Working Paper w18371, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. Dickinson, J., J. Khan, D. Price, S. Caputo, Jr., and S. Mahnovski. 2012. “Inventory of New York City Greenhouse Gas Emissions, City of New York.” Mayor’s Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability, New York. Draugelis, Gailius, and Shawna Fei Li. 2012. “Energy Efficiency in Buildings.” In Sustainable Low-Carbon City Development in China, edited by Axel Baeumler, Ede IjjaszVasquez, and Shomik Mehndiratta, 179–205. Washington, DC: World Bank. Eaton, S., and G. Kostka. 2013. “Does Cadre Turnover Help or Hinder China’s Green Rise? Evidence from Shanxi Province.” In Chinese Environmental Policy: Dynamics, Challenges, and Prospects in a Changing Society, edited by Ren Bingqiang and Shou Shuisheng. London: Palgrave Macmillan Publishers. ———. 2014. “Authoritarian Environmentalism Undermined? Local Leaders’ Time Horizons and Environmental Policy Implementation.” China Quarterly, forthcoming. Ebenstein, Avraham. 2012. “The Consequences of Industrialization: Evidence from Water Pollution and Digestive Cancers in China.” Review of Economics and Statistics 94 (1): 186–201. EC (European Commission). 2011. “Roadmap to a Single European Transport Area: Towards a Competitive and Resource Efficient Transport System.” EC White Paper, COM(2011) 144 final, Brussels. Economy, Elisabeth. 2010. The River Runs Black: The Environmental Challenge to China’s Future. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. Feng, Kuishuang, Steven J. Davis, Laixiang Sun, Xin Li, Dabo Guan, Weidong Liu, Zhu Liu, and Klaus Hubacek. 2013. “Outsourcing CO2 within China.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. http://www.pnas.org/cgi /doi/10.1073/pnas.1219918110. Fisher-Vanden, Karen, Yong Hu, Gary Jefferson, and Michael Rock. 2013. “Factors Influencing Energy Intensity in Four Chinese Industries.” Policy Research Working Paper WPS6551, World Bank, Washington, DC. Fisher-Vanden, Karen, and Sheila Olmstead. 2013. “Moving Pollution Trading from Air to Water: Potential, Problems, and Prognosis.” Journal of Economic Perspectives 27 (1): 147–72. Francis, J. A., and S. J. Vavrus. 2012. “Evidence Linking A rctic A mplification to

539


540

URBAN CHINA

E x t rem e We at her i n M id̺l at it ude s .” Geophysic al R ese arc h L e t t e rs 39 (6). doi:10.1029/2012GL051000. Fridley, David, Nina Zheng, Nan Zhou, Jing Ke, Ali Hasanbeigi, Bill Morrow, and Lynn Price. 2012 “China Energy and Emissions Paths to 2030.” 2d ed. Report LBNL-4866E, Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California. Fung, Freda, Hui He, Benjamin Sharpe, Fatumata Kamakaté. 2010. “Overview of China’s Vehicle Emission Control Program: Past Successes and Future Prospects” (ᷕ⚥㛢≐弎㌺㓦㍏⇞ ㍒㕥孬Ộ— —ㆸ≇乷樴ᶶ㛒㜍⯽㛃). International Council of Clean Transportation, Beijing, http://www.theicct.org/sites/default/fi les /publications/Retrosp_final_bilingual.pdf. Gayer, Ted, and Emily Parker. 2013. “Cash for Clunkers: An Evaluation of the Car Allowance Rebate System.” Brookings Institution, Washington, DC. Gerrard, P. 2004. “Integrating Wetland Ecosystem Values into Urban Planning: The Case of That Luang Marsh, Vientiane, Lao PDR.” IUCN−The World Conservation Union Asia Regional Environmental Economics Programme and W W F Lao Country Office, Vientiane. http://www.mekongwetlands.org/ Common/download/WANI_economics_ThatLuang%20Marsh.pdf. GIZ (German Agency for International Cooperation). 2013. “International Fuel Prices 2012/2013.” Federal Ministry for International Cooperation and Development, Eschborn. Goldberg, Amélie, Julia Reinaud, and Robert Taylor. 2011. “Promotion Systems and Incentives for Adoption of Energy Management Systems in Industry.” Institute for Industrial Productivity, Washington, DC. Graff Zivin, J., and M. Neidell. 2012. “The Impact of Pollution on Worker Productivity.” American Economic Review 102: 3652–73. Grubb, Michael. 2012. “Strengthening the EU ETS: Creating a Stable Platform for EU Energy Sector Investment.” Climate Strategies, London. http://www.climatestrategies.org /research/our-reports/category/60/343.html. Grubler, Amulf, and David Fisk, eds. 2013. Energizing Sustainable Cities: Assessing Urban Energy. New York: Routledge. Guo, Maxia, Fang Yu, Dong Cao, and Kunyu Niu. 2012. “Calculation of Agricultural NonPoint Source Pollution Emissions in China and Long-Term Forecast (ᷕ⚥⅄᷂朊㸸㰉㝻㌺㓦慷 孉䬿⍲ᷕ攧㛇栬㳳).” Acta Scientiae Circumstantiae (䍗⠫䥹⬎⬎㉍) 32 (2): 489–97.

HEI (Health Effects Institute). 2013. “Outdoor Air Pollution among Top Global Health Risks in 2010: Risks Especially High in Developing Countries in Asia.” Press release, December 13, HEI, Boston, http://www.healtheffects .org/International/GBD-Press-Release.pdf. Hildebrandt, Timothy. 2011. “The Political Economy of Social Organization Registration in China.” China Quarterly 208: 970–89. Ho, Mun S., and Dale Jorgenson. 2003. “Air Pollution in China: Sector Allocation of Emissions and Health Damages.” http://people.hmdc. harvard.edu/~mho/CCICED.report1.pdf. Hong, Lixuan, Jinshe Liang, Jianming Cai, and Li Zhuang. 2011. “Growth of Industrial Energy Consumption in China’s Prefecture-Level Cities Based on Data from 2001–2006” (ᷕ⚥⛘乏 ẍᶲ❶ⶪⶍ᷂傥㸸㴰峡䘬⡆攧ȹȹġ➢Ḷġ2001~ 2006 ⸜䘬㔘㌖↮妋). Geographical Research ( ⛘䎮䞼䨞) 30 (1): 83–93. Hoornweg, Daniel, and Perinaz Bhada-Tata. 2012. “What a Waste: A Global Review of Solid Waste Management.” Urban Development Series Knowledge Paper 15. World Bank, Washington, DC. Huang, Shukui, and Jiawu Wang. 2010. “Some Discussion on Problems about Standard of Civil Building Indoor Environment Pollution Control and Standard of Indoor Air Quality.” (˪㮹䓐⺢䫹ⶍ䦳⭌ℭ䍗⠫㰉㝻㍏⇞奬劫˫⍲˪⭌ ℭ䨢㮼峐慷㞯Ⅾ˫㚱ℛ斖桀䘬㍊子). Construction Quality (ⶍ䦳峐慷) 28 (5): 61–63. Hutchinson, David, Yutaka Tonooka, Akiyoshi Kannari, Yuko Nishida, and David Vowles. 2004. “Air Quality in London and Tokyo: A Comparison.” 13th World Clean Air and Environmental Protection Congress and Exhibition, London, August 22–27. ICLEI USA (Local Governments for Sustainability USA) and City of New York. 2010. “The Process Behind PlaNYC: How the City of New York Developed its Comprehensive Long-term Sustainability Plan.” Report for The Mayor’s Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability, City of New York. http://ny telecom.vo.llnwd.net/o15/agencies/planyc2030 /pdf/iclei_planyc_case_study_201004.pdf. James, Chris, and Rebecca Shultz. 2011. “Climate-Friendly Air Quality Management: Strategies for Control.” Policy note, Regulatory Assistance Project (RAP), Montpelier, VT. Jiang, Liping, and Xiaokai Li. 2013. “Water R e s o u r c e s a n d Po l lu t i o n I s s u e s a n d Recommendations.”Background note for China: Efficient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization, DRC and World Bank, Beijing.


GREEN URBANIZATION

Jin, Yanhong, Hua Wang, and David Wheeler. 2010. “Environmental Performance Rating and Disclosure: An Empirical Investigation of China’s Green Watch Program.” Policy Research Working Paper 5420, World Bank, Washington, DC. Jones, Holly, David Hole, and Erika Zavaleta. 2012. “Harnessing Nature to Help People Adapt to Climate Change.” Nature Climate Change 2: 504–09. Kahrl, F., Junfeng Hu, Gabe Kwok, and James Williams. 2013. “Strategies for Expanding Natural Gas-fi red Electricity Generation in China: Economics and Policy.” Energy Strategy Reviews. http:dx.doi.org/10.1016/j .esr.2013.04.006. Kaiser, Todd, and Rongkun Liu. 2009. “Taking the Pulse: The One-Year Anniversary of China’s Open Government Information Measures.” China Environmental Health Project Research Brief, China Environment Forum and Western Kentucky University. Kostka, Genia. 2013. “Barriers to the Implementation of Environmental Policies at the Local Level in China.” Background note for China: Efficient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization, DRC and World Bank, Beijing. ———. 2014. “China’s Evolving Green Planning System: Are Targets the Answer?” Working Paper 202 , Depar tment of E conomics, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, Frankfurt, Germany. Kostka, Genia, and William Hobbs. 2012. “Local Energy Efficiency Policy Implementation in China: Bridging the Gap between National Priorities and Local Interests.” China Quarterly 211: 765–85. Kostka, G., and X. Yu. 2014. “Career Backgrounds of Municipal Party Secretaries: Why Do So Few Municipal Party Secretaries Rise from the County Level?” Modern China, forthcoming. Larsson, S. 2008. “Data and Indicators for Road Freight Transport.” Presentation at New Energy Indicators for Transport conference, Paris, January 28–29. Lees, Eion. 2012. “Energy Efficiency Obligations—The EU Experience.” European Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, Stockholm. Lei, Y., Q. Zhang, K. B He, and D. G. Streets. 2011. “Primary Anthropogenic Aerosol Emission Trends for China, 1990–2005.” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 11 (3): 931–54. Levine, M., S. de la Rue de Can, N. Zheng, and C. Williams. 2012. “Building Energy-Energy Efficiency Best Practice Policies and Policy Pack-

ages.” Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory report LBNL-6006E, Berkeley, California, http://eaei.lbl.gov/sites/all/files/GBPN_Final. Oct_.2012.pdf. Li, Fangyi, Weidong Liu, and Hongguang Liu. 2011. “Interregional Virtual Water Trade Model and its Application in Shanxi Province.” (⋢➇斜嘂㊇㯜峠㖻㧉✳⍲℞⛐Ⱉ大䚩 䘬⸼䓐). Resources Science (峬㸸䥹⬎) 34 (5), doi: CNKI:11-3868/N.20111202.1026.009. Li, Jia, Voravate Tuntivate, Lan Wang, and Feng Liu. 2009. “Energy Efficiency Policy in the Cement Sector: A Study of the Impacts of Vertical Shaft Kiln Plants Closings.” Report for Asia Sustainable and Alternative Energy Program, World Bank, Beijing. Li, Jing-guang. 2010. “Discussion on Construction of Chinese Indoor Air Quality Standard System” (ㆹ⚥⭌ℭ䨢㮼峐慷㞯Ⅾỻ䲣⺢学䘬⿅ 侫). Building Science (⺢䫹䥹⬎) 26 (4): 1–7. Li, Shanjun and Chao Wei. 2013. “The Cost of Greening Stimulus: A Dynamic Discrete Analysis of Vehicle Scrappage Programs.” Working paper, George Washington University, Washington, DC. http://home.gwu .edu/~cdwei/GreenStimulus_Li&Wei_2013 .pdf. Li, Terry H. Y., S. Thomas Ng, and Martin Skitmore. 2012. “Public Participation in Infrastructure and Construction Projects in China: From an EIA Based to a Whole-cycle Process.” Habitat International 36 (1): 47–56. Li, W., and P. Higgins. 2013. “Controlling Local Environmental Performance: An Analysis of Three National Environmental Management Programs in the Context of Regional Disparities in China.” Journal of Contemporary China 22 (81): 409–27. Lin, Boqiang, and Zhujun Jiang. 2011. “Estimates of Energy Subsidies in China and Impact of Energy Subsidy Reform.” Energy Economics 33: 273–82. Lin, Boqiang, and Jianghua Liu. 2011. “Principles, Effects and Problems of Differential Power Pricing Policy for Energy Intensive Industries in China.” Energy 36: 111–18. Lin, Tun, Canfa Wang, Yi Chen, Trisa Camacho, and Fen Lin. 2009. “Green Benches: What Can the People’s Republic of China Learn from Environment Courts of Other Countries?” Asian Development Bank, Manila. Liu, F., Z . Klimont, Q. Zhang, J. Cofala, L. J. Zhao, H. Huo, B. Nguyen, W. Schöpp, R. Sander, B. Zheng, C. P. Hong, K. B. He, M. Amann, and C. Heyes. 2013. “Integrating Mitigation of Air Pollutants and Green-

541


542

URBAN CHINA

house Gases in Chinese cities: Development of GAINS-City model for Beijing.” Journal of Cleaner Production 58: 25–33. Liu, Jieling, and Wenju Jiang. 2012. “Analysis of Energy Consumption of Municipal Sewage Plant and Measures of Energy Saving” ( ❶ⶪ㰉㯜⢬䎮〉傥便↮㜸⍲刪傥㍒㕥). Journal of Green Science and Technology (产刚䥹㈨) (November): 136–37. Liu, W. W., Y. P. Zhang, Y. Yao, and others. 2012. “Indoor Decorating and Refurbishing Materials and Furniture Volatile Organic Compounds Emission Labeling Systems: A Review.” Chinese Science Bulletin 57: 2533–43. Liu, X., Y. Zhang, W. Han, A. Tang, J. Shen, Z. Cui, and others. 2013. “Enhanced Nitrogen Deposition over China.” Nature 494: 459–62. Lorentzen, Peter, Pierre Landry, and John Yasuda. 2014. “Undermining Authoritarian Innovation: The Power of China’s Industrial Giants.” Journal of Politics 76(1): 182–94. Lu, Z., D. G. Streets, Q. Zhang, S. Wang, G. R. Carmichael, Y. F. Cheng, and Q. Tan. 2010. “Sulfur Dioxide Emissions in China and Sulfur Trends in East Asia since 2000.” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 10 (13): 6311–31. Lund, H., R. Cervero, and R. W. Wilson. 2004. “Travel Characteristics of Transit-Oriented Development in California.” Report for Bay Area Rapid Transit District and California Department of Transportation, Sacramento. Ma, Linwei, Julian Allwood, Jonathan Cullen, and Zheng Li. 2012. “The Use of Energy in China: Tracing the Flow of Energy from Primary Source to Demand Drivers.” Energy 40: 174–88. Mao Yushi, Hong Sheng, and Fuqiang Yang. 2008. “The True Cost of Coal.” Greenpeace East Asia, The China Sustainable Energy Program, and World Wildlife Fund, Beijing. Mao, L., H. Zhu, and L. Duan. 2012. “The Social Cost of Traffic Congestion and Countermeasures in Beijing. Sustainable Transportation Systems, pp. 68–76. American Society of Civil Engineers, http://dx.doi .org/10.1061/9780784412299.0010. Matus, Kira, Kyung-Min Namb, Noelle E. Selin, Lok N. Lamsal, John M. Reilly, and Sergey Paltsev. 2012. “Health Damages from Air Pollution in China.” Global Environmental Change 22: 55–66. Mayor of London. 2007. “Action Today to Protect Tomorrow: The Mayor’s Climate Change Action Plan, Greater London Authority.” http:// legacy.london.gov.uk/gla/publications /environment.jsp.

MEP (Ministry of Environmental Protection). 2008–13. Report on the State of the Environment (䍗⠫䉞⅝℔㉍). http://jcs.mep.gov.cn /hjzl/zkgb/. ———. 2012b. “MEP Publishes 2012 Annual Report on Vehicular Emissions Control” (䍗⠫ ᾅ㉌悐⍹ⶫ2012⸜ᷕ⚥㛢≐弎㰉㝻旚㱣䉞⅝). http://www.mep.gov.cn/gkml/hbb/qt/201212 /t20121227_244340.htm. MIT-Tsinghua-EF (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Tsinghua University, and Energy Foundation). 2011. “Designing Clean Energy Cities: New Approaches to Urban Design and Energy Performance.” Joint report for “Clean Energy City” in China project, Cambridge, MA., and Beijing. MOHURD (Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, PRC). 2012. 12th Five Year Plan for Building Energy Efficiency (ℛḶ⌘ ⍹ “⋩ḴḼ” ⺢䫹刪傥ᶻ校奬↺䘬忂䞍). Jian Ke 72, http://www.gov.cn/zwgk/2012-05/31 /content_2149889.htm. Moore, Scott. 2013. “Water Resource Issues, Policy and Politics in China.” Brookings Institution issue brief, February 12. http:// www.brookings.edu/research/papers/2013/02 /water-politics-china-moore#_edn2. Moskovitz, David, Lin Jiang, Frederick Weston, Fuqiu Zhou, Shujie Liu, Zhaoguang Hu, and Cong Yu. 2007. “TA 4706-PRC: Energy Conservation and Resource Management Project, Part A Final Report.” Report to Asian Development Bank, Beijing, July. Müller, D. B., G. Liu, A. N. Lovik, R. Modaresi, S. Pauliuk, F. S. Steinhoff, and H. Brattebo. 2013. “Carbon Emissions from Infrastructure Development.” Environmental Science and Technology 47 (20): 11739–46. NBS (National Bureau of Statistics, China). 2007a–2013a. China Statistical Yearbook (ᷕ⚥亇孉⸜戜). Beijing: China Statistics Press. ———. 1991b–2011b. China Statistical Yearbook of Cities (ᷕ⚥❶ⶪ亇孉⸜戜). Beijing: China Statistics Press. ———. 2000c–2012c. China Statistical Yearbook of Energy (ᷕ⚥傥㸸亇孉⸜戜). Beijing: China Statistics Press. ———. 2005d–2012d. China Statistical Yearbook of Prices of Goods (୯ᅗ∸௳亇孉ᖳ戜). Beijing: China Statistics Press. NDRC (National Development and Reform Commission, China). 2011. “Significant Progress Made in Energy Conservation and Emissions Reductions—A Look Back at the Energy Conservation and Emissions Reduction Accomplishments of the 11th Five Year Plan, Part I”


GREEN URBANIZATION

(刪傥ⅷ㌺⍾⼿㗦叿ㆸ㓰——“⋩ᶨḼ”刪傥ⅷ㌺ ⚆栦ᷳᶨ). NDRC news release. Beijing. http:// www.sdpc.gov.cn/xwfb/t20110927_435642. htm. ———. 2012. “List of Enterprises and Energy Savings Targets for Top 10,000 Enterprise Energy Conservation and Emissions Reduction Program” (“ᶯ⭞ẩ᷂刪傥Ỷ䡛埴≐”ẩ᷂ ⎵⋽⍲刪傥慷䚖㞯), NDRC public notice 10, May 12. ———. 2013. “National Government Adjusts Refi ned Petroleum Product Prices Downward and Issues Plan for Improving Pricing Mechanism” (⚥⭞ᶳ宫ㆸ⑩㱡ẟ㟤 ⎴㬍↢⎘ẟ㟤㛢⇞ ⬴┬㕡㟰), March 26. http://www.ndrc.gov.cn /xwfb/t20130326_534062.htm. Nielsen, Chris P., and Mun S. Ho. 2007. “Summary for Policy.” In Clearing the Air: The Health and Economic Damages of Air Pollution in China, edited by Ho and Nielsen, 51–66. Boston: MIT Press. NRC (National Research Council, United States). 2010. Hidden Costs of Energy: Unpriced Consequences of Energy Production and Use. Washington, DC: National Academies Press. NRC Committee on Air Quality Management in the United States. 2004. Air Quality Management in the United States. Washington, DC: National Academies Press. Nygard, J., and U. Deichmann. 2013. “Air Quality Management in China.” Background note for China: Effi cient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization, DRC and World Bank, Beijing. OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development). 2009. OECD Factbook 2009. Paris: OECD. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787 /factbook-2009-en. Okubo, Yasushi. 2013. “Mt. Fuji Lovers Get Bonus with More Days to See It from Tokyo.” Asahi Shimbun, February 25, http://ajw .asahi.com/article/behind_news/social_affairs /AJ201302250003 . Ollivier, G., B. Reja, Runze Yu, Qu Li, and Yu Qin. 2013. “Sustainable Mobility: How Will China Meet the Transport Demand of a Green and Low Carbon Urbanization?” Background note for China: Efficient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization, DRC and World Bank, Beijing. Olmstead, Sheila M. 2010a. “The Economics of Managing Scarce Water Resources.” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 4 (2): 179–98. ———. 2010b. “The Economics of Water Quality.” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 4 (1): 44–62.

Padula, Amy M., Ira B. Tager, Suzan L. Carmichael, S. Katharine Hammond, Frederick Lurmann, and Gary M. Shaw. 2013. “The Association of Ambient Air Pollution and Traffic Exposures With Selected Congenital Anomalies in the San Joaquin Valley of California.” American Journal of Epidemiology 177 (10): 1074–85. Parry, Ian W., and Kenneth A. Small. 2009. “Should Urban Transit Subsidies Be Reduced? American Economic Review 99 (3):700–24. Peng, Ximing. 2012. “Low Carbon Electricity for Cities.”In Sustainable Low-Carbon City Development in China, edited by Axel Baeumler, Ede Ijjasz-Vasquez, and Shomik Mehndiratta, 131–47. Washington, DC: World Bank. Peters, G. P., J. C. Minx, C. L. Weber, and O. Edenhofer. 2011. “Growth in Emission Transfers via International Trade from 1990 to 2008.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108 (21): 8903–08. Porter, C. D., A. Brown, R. T. Dunphy, and L . Vimmerstedt. 2013. “Transportation Energy Futures Series: Effects of the Built Environment on Transportation: Energy Use, Greenhouse Gas Emissions, and Other Factors.” Report DOE/GO-102013-3703 by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO, and Cambridge Systematics, Inc., Cambridge, MA, for the U.S. Department of Energy, Washington, DC. Postel, Sandra, and Barton Thompson, Jr. 2005. “Watershed Protection: Capturing the Benefits of Nature’s Water Supply Services.” Natural Resources Forum 29: 98–108. Proost, Stef, and Kurt van Dender. 2011. “What Long-term Road Transport Future? Trends and Policy Options.” Review of Economics and Policy 5 (1): 44–65. Qu, Weidong, Weiwei Zheng, Shu Wang, and Youfa Wang. 2012 . “China’s New National Standard for Drinking Water Takes Effect.” Lancet 380 (9853): doi:10.1016 /S0140-6736(12)61884-4. RAP (Regulatory Assistance Project). 2013. “Recommendations for Power Sector Policy in China: Practical Solutions for Energy, Climate and Air Quality.” RAP policy report, Beijing, October. http://www.raponline.org/document /download/id/6869. Ren, Yong. 2000. “Japanese Approaches to Environmental Management: Structural and Institutional Features.” International Review for Environmental Strategies 1 (1) :79–96.

543


544

URBAN CHINA

Renmin University. 2013. 3E datasets (Economy, Energy and Environment). http://www.3edata .com. Ruggeri Laderchi, Caterina, Anne Olivier, and Chris Trimble. 2013. Balancing Act: Cutting Energy Subsidies While Protecting Affordability. Washington, DC: World Bank. Salat, Serge. 2012. Cities and Forms: On Sustainable Urbanism. Paris: Hermann. ———. 2013. “Chinese Urban Forms and Energy.” Background paper for China: Efficient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization, DRC and World Bank, Beijing. Sall, Chris, and Katrina Brandon. Forthcoming. “Developing Policies for Ecosystem-Based Adaptation in China.” Sustainable Development Discussion Paper Series, East Asia and Pacific Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Salzman, J. 2009. “A Policy Maker’s Guide to Designing Payments for Ecosystem Services.” Report for Asian Development Bank, Manila. http://scholarship.law.duke.edu /faculty_scholarship/2081/. Song, Y., and N. Berrah. 2013. “West or East Wind: Getting the Incentives Right.” Policy Research Working Paper 6486, World Bank, Washington, DC. State Council. 2012. State Council Approval of 12th Five Year Plan for Prevention and Control of Air Pollution in Key Regions (⚥≉昊ℛḶ 慵䁡⋢➇⣏㮼㰉㝻旚㱣Ⱦ⋩ḴḼȿ奬↺䘬㈡⢵), Guo Han 146. http://www.mep.gov.cn/gkml /hbb/bwj/201212/W020121205566730369875 .pdf. ———. 2013. State Council Notice Regarding Circulation of NDRC and MOHURD Green Building Action Plan (⚥≉昊≆℔⌭ℛḶ弔 ⍹⍹⯽㓡朑⥼ỷ㇧❶ḉ⺢学悐产刚⺢䫹埴≐ 㕡㟰䘬忂䞍), Guo Ban 1. http://www.gov.cn /zwgk/2013-01/06/content_2305793.htm. State Grid Corporation of China. 2011. “2010 China Power Market Electricity Trading Report” (2010⸜䓝≃ⶪ⛢Ṍ㖻⸜㉍). SGCC, Beijing. http://service.sgcc.com.cn /dljynb /index.shtml. Stern, Nicholas. 2007. The Economics of Climate Change: The Stern Review. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Stern, Rachel E. 2011. “From Dispute to Decision: Suing Polluters in China.” China Quarterly 206: 294–312. Sugar, L., C. Kennedy, and E. Leman. 2012. “Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Chinese Cities.” Journal of Industrial Ecology 16 (4): 552–63. Sun Xiaoliang, Zhu Lin, and Bob Taylor. 2011. “China’s ESCO Industry: Saving More Energy

Every Day through the Market.” http:// ryanschuchard.files.wordpress.com/2011/06 /chinas-esco-industry-2010.pdf. Tan, Yelin. 2012. “Transparency without Democracy: The Unexpected Effects of China’s Environmental Disclosure Policy.” Governance. doi:10.1111/gove.12018. Taylor, Robert. 2013. “Energy Efficiency Resource Acquisition Programs: A MarketBased Approach for Effectively Using Public Funds for Energy Efficiency.” Institute for Industrial Productivity, Washington, DC. Taylor, Robert, Gailius Draugelis, Yabei Zhang, and Albert Ang Co. 2010. “Accelerating Energy Conservation in China’s Provinces.” Report 56416, World Bank, Washington, DC. http://www-wds.world bank.org/external /default/ W DSContentServer/ W DSP/ IB/20 10/09/01/000333038 _ 20100901232632/ Rendered/PDF/564160ESW0whit1in0China 1s0Provinces.pdf. Taylor, Robert, Chris Sall, and Gailius Draugelis. 2013. “Industrial Energy Efficiency.” Background note for China: Efficient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization, DRC and World Bank, Beijing. Taylor, Robert, Dan Trombley, and Julia Reinaud. 2012. “Energy Efficiency Resource Acquisition Program Models in North America.” Institute for Industrial Productivity, Washington, DC. THUBERC (Tsinghua University Building Efficiency Research Center). 2013. Annual Report on the Development of Building Energy Efficiency in China 2013 (ᷕ⚥⺢䫹刪傥⸜⹎⍹⯽ 䞼䨞㉍⏲2013). Tsinghua. UBA (Federal Environment Agency, Germany). 2011. Environmentally Harmful Subsidies in Germany—Update 2010. Dessau-Roßblau: UBA. van Rooij, B., and C. W. H. Lo. 2010. Fragile Convergence: Understanding Variation in the Enforcement of China’s Industrial Pollution Law. Law & Policy 32 (1): 14–37. van Wilgen, B. W., R. M. Cowling, and C. J. Burgers. 1996. “Valuation of Ecosystem Services.” BioScience 46 (3): 184–89. Viard, Brian, and Shihe Fu. 2013. “The Effect of Beijing’s Driving Restrictions on Pollution and Economic Activity.” Social Science Research Network working paper. http://papers.ssrn. com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1917110. Walsh, Michael. 2006. “How to Reduce Air Pollution with Cleaner Fuels and Cleaner Vehicles.” Presentation at 14th Session of UN Commission for Sustainable Development, New York, May. http://walshcarlines.com/mpwdocs.html.


GREEN URBANIZATION

Wang, H., D. Wheeler, and Y. Jin. 2010. “Environmental Performance Rating and Disclosure: An Empirical Investigation of China’s Green Watch Program.” Policy Research Working Paper 5420, World Bank, Washington, DC. Wang, H., R. Zhang, M. Liu, and J. Bi. 2012. “The Carbon Emissions of Chinese Cities.” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 12: 6197–206. Wang, X., N. Berrah, and X. Peng. 2012. “Energy Sector Background Note.” Background note for China: Effi cient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization, DRC and World Bank, Beijing. Wang, X.S, L. Song, and R.Y. Bai Runying. 2013. “Energy Consumption Evaluation and Carbon Emission Analysis for Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants in Hohot City” (␤␴㴑䈡⛘ ⋢㰉㯜〉傥便孬ẟᶶ䡛㌺㓦↮㜸). Environmental Science and Technology (䍗⠫䥹⬎ᶶ㈨㛗) 36, no. 2: 196–199. Weber, C. L., G. P. Peters, D. Guan, and K. Hubaceck. 2008. “The Contribution of Chinese Exports to Climate Change.” Energy Policy 36: 3572–77. Wen, K., and E. Zhu. 2013. Annual report on Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Metropolitan Region Development 2013. Beijing: Social Sciences Academic Press. WHO (World Health Organization). 2010. WHO Guidelines for Indoor Air Quality: Selected Pollutants. Copenhagen: W HO Regional Office for Europe. World Bank. World Development Indicators database. http://data.worldbank.org. ———. 1997. Clear Water, Blue Skies: China’s Environment in the New Century. Washington, DC: World Bank. ———. 2009. “China: Social Analysis of Heating Reforms in Liaoning Province.” Asia Sustainable and Alternative Energy Program, Energy Sector Management Assistance Program, World Bank, Washington, DC. ———. 2011a. “China Air Pollution Management Project—Particulate Matter Control: Component 1: Development of a Particulate Matter Compliance Plan for China.” Draft final report, World Bank, Washington, DC, July. ———. 2011b. “China Air Pollution Management Project—Particulate Matter Control: Component 2: An Air Quality Management Program for PM10 Reduction in 3 Cities in Shanxi Province.” Draft final report, World Bank, Washington, DC, July. ———. 2012a. “China: Enhancing the Institutional Model for District Heating Regulation—Outside Perspectives and Suggestions.”

Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP) report, World Bank, Washington DC. ———. 2012b. “China: Improving Energy Efficiency in Public Institutions.” Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP) report, World Bank, Washington DC. ———. 2012c. “Towards a More Effective Operational Response:Arsenic Contamination of Groundwater in South and East Asian Countries.” World Bank, Washington, DC. ———. 2013a. “China: Accelerating Household Access to Clean Cooking and Heating.” East Asia and Pacific Clean Stove Initiative Series, World Bank, Washington, DC. ———. 2013b. “China Country Water Resources Partnership Strategy (2013–2020).” World, Bank, Washington, DC. World Bank–DRC (World Bank and State Council Development Research Center). 2013. China 2030: Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative Society. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank ESMAP (Energy Sector Management Assistance Program). 2013. “Applying Abatement Cost Curve Methodology for LowCarbon Strategy in Changning District, Shanghai.” Asia Sustainable and Alternative Energy Program report, ESMAP, World Bank, Beijing. World Bank–MEP (Ministry of Environmental Protection, PRC). 2012. “Integrated Air Pollution Management in China: Developing Particulate Matter Control.” World Bank, Washington, DC. World Bank–SEPA (State Environmental Protection Agency, PRC). 2007. Cost of Pollution in China: Economic Estimates of Physical Damages. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank, Shanxi Environmental Protection Bureau, and Xinjiang Environmental Protection Bureau. 2012, “Integrated Air Pollution Management in Chinese Cities: Proposed Particulate Matter Control in Taiyuan, Lishi, Xiaoyi and Urumqi,” seminar edition. World Bank, Washington, DC, June. Wu, F. 2013. “Environmental Activism in Provincial China.” Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning 15 (1): 89–108. Wu, Jing, Yongheng Deng, Jun Huang, Randall Morck, and Bernard Yeung. 2013. “Incentives and Outcomes: China’s Environmental Policy.” Working Paper 18754, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. Xinhua. 2009 “Full Text of Petroleum Pricing Administrative Rules.” May 8. http:// news.xinhuanet.com /fortune/2009- 05/08 /content_11336876.htm.

545


546

URBAN CHINA

———. 2013. “Atmospheric Pollution Prevention and Control Action Plan (Authorized Release)” [(㌰㛫⍹ⶫ) ⣏㮼㰉㝻旚㱣埴≐孉↺]. September 12. http://news.xinhuanet.com/politics/201309/12/c_117349304.htm. Yang, Lingbo, Siyu Zeng, Ningping Ju, Miao He, and Jining Chen. 2008. “Statistical Analysis and Quantification of China Urban Wastewater Treatment Plant Energy Usage Patterns” (ㆹ ⚥❶ⶪ㰉㯜⢬䎮〉傥便奬⼳䘬亇孉↮㜸ᶶ⭂慷 孮⇓) Water and Wastewater Engineering (亁 㯜㌺㯜) 34 (10): 42–45. Yang, L. X., X. H. Zhou, Z. Wang, Y. Zhou, S. H. Cheng, P. J. Xu, X. M. Gao, W. Nie, X. F. Wang, and W. X. Wang. 2012. “Airborne Fine Particulate Pollution in Jinan, China: Concentrations, Chemical Compositions, and Influence on Visibility Impairment.” Atmospheric Environment 55: 506–14. Yang, Ming. 2010. “Energy Efficiency Improving Opportunities in a Large Chinese ShoeMaking Enterprise.” Energ y Policy 38: 452–62. Zhang, Hongliang, Jingyi Li, Qi Ying, Jianzhen Yu, Dui Wu, Yuan Cheng, Kebin He, and Jingkun Jiang. 2012. “Source Apportionment of PM 2.5 Nitrate and Sulfate in China Using a Source-Oriented Chemical Transport Model.” Atmospheric Environment 62: 228–42. Zhang Liang. 2012. “Electricity Pricing in a Partial Reformed Plan System: The Case of China.” Energy Policy 43: 214–25. Zhang, M inchun, and Bao Zhang. 2012 . “Specialized Environmental Courts in China: Status Quo, Challenges and Responses.” Journal of Energy & Natural Resources Law 30 (4): 361–90. Zhang, Y., A. J. Dore, L. Ma, X. J. Liu, W. Q. Ma, J. N. Cape, and F. S. Zhang. 2010. “Agricultural Ammonia Emissions Inventory and Spatial Distribution in the North China Plain.” Environmental Pollution 158 (2): 490–501. Zhang Yinping, Jinhan Mo, and Charles Weschler. 2013. “Reducing Health Risks from Indoor Exposures in Rapidly Developing Urban China.” Environmental Health Perspectives. http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/ehp.1205983. Zhao, Tongqian, Zhiyun Ouyang, Liangqing Jia, and Hua Zheng. 2004. “Assessment of the Indirect Value of China’s Grassland Ecosystem Services” (ᷕ⚥勱⛘䓇⾩䲣亇㚵≉≇傥斜㍍ẟῤ 孬ẟ).” Acta Ecologica Sinica 24 (6) 1101–10. Zhao, Y. 2010. “Public Participation in China’s EIA Regime: Rhetoric or Reality? Journal of Environmental Law 22 (1): 89–123.

Zhao, Zhengquan, Dong Xu, Hao Zhang, Zhengbin Sun, Huihui Yang, and Yuan Zhou. 2010. “Power Consumption of Wastewater Treatment and the Measures of Energy Saving” (ᷕ ⚥㰉㯜⢬䎮䓝便↮㜸␴刪傥徼⼬). Science and Technology Review (䥹㈨⮤㉍) 28 (22): 43–47. Zheng, Siqi, Matthew E. Kahn, Weizeng Sun and Danglun Luo. 2013. “Incentivizing China’s Urban Mayors to Mitigate Pollution Externalities: The Role of the Central Government and Public Environmentalism.” Research Working Paper 18872, National Bureau of Economic, Cambridge, MA. Zhou, Nan, David Fridley, Michael McNeil, Nina Zheng, Jing Ke, and Mark Levine. 2011. “China’s Energy and Carbon Emissions Outlook to 2050.” Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Berkeley, CA. Zhou, Nan, and Christopher J. Williams. 2013. “An International Review of Eco-City Theory, Indicators, and Case Studies.” Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory report LBNL6513, Berkeley, CA. Zhu, Hui. 2012. “Experience of Shandong Province in Establishing Energy Management Systems.” Presentation at IIP Second International Workshop on Energy Management Systems, Dezhou, Shandong, November 19.

Annex 7B

References

BAAQMD (Bay Area Air Quality Management District). 2010. “Bay Area 2010 Clean Air Plan.” Plan adopted by BAAQMD, San Francisco, California, United States. http:// www.baaqmd.gov/Divisions/Planning-andResearch/Plans/Clean-Air-Plans.aspx. Broersma S., M. Fremouw, A. van den Dobbelsteen, and R. Rovers. 2010. “Warmtekaarten— Nederlandse warmtekarakteristieken in kaart gebracht.” TU Delft, Faculty of Architecture, Netherlands. Fridley, David, Nina Zheng, and Zhou Nan. 2012. “Urban RAM: Assessing the Energy Impact of Having People in Cities.” American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings, Pacific Grove, CA. He Gang, Zhou Nan, Christopher Williams, and David Fridley. 2013. “ELITE Cities: A Low-carbon Eco-city Evaluation Tool for China” ECEEE 2013 Summer Study, June, http://proceedings.eceee.org /visabstrakt .php?event=3&doc=3-399-13.Hildebrandt, T., 2011. The political economy of social organi-


GREEN URBANIZATION

zation registration in China, The China Quarterly, 208, 970–989. ICLEI-NYC (Local Governments for Sustainability USA and The Mayor’s Office for Long-Term Planning and Sustainability, City of New York). 2010. “The Process Behind PlaNYC: How the City of New York Developed Its Comprehensive Long-term Sustainability Plan.” ICLEI and City of New York, April 2010. http://nytelecom.vo.llnwd.net/o15 /agencies/planyc2030/pdf/iclei_planyc_case_ study_201004.pdf. James, Chris, and Rebecca Schultz. 2011. “Climate-Friendly Air Quality Management: Strategies for Control.” Policy note, Regulatory Assistance Project (RAP), Montpelier, VT. Levine, M., S. de la Rue de Can, N. Zheng, and C. Williams. 2012. “Building Energy-Energy Efficiency Best Practice Policies and Policy Packages.” Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory report LBNL-6006E, Berkeley, CA. http://eaei.lbl.gov/sites/all/files/GBPN_Final. Oct_.2012.pdf. NYC (City of New York). 2011. “PlaNYC 2011, A Greener, Greater New York.” April 2011. http://nytelecom.vo.llnwd.net/o15/agencies /planyc2030/pdf/planyc_2011_planyc_full_ report.pdf. Price, Lynn, Zhou Nan, David Fridley, Stephanie Ohshita, Lu Hongyou, Nina Zheng, and Cecilia Fino-Chen. 2013. “Development of a LowCarbon Indicator System for China.” Habitat International 37: 4-21. Salat, Serge. 2013. “Chinese Urban Forms and Energy.” Background note for China: Efficient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization study, World Bank and DRC, Beijing. State Council. 2012. State Council Approval of 12th Five Year Plan for Prevention and Control of Air Pollution in Key Polluting Areas (⚥≉昊 ℛḶ慵䁡⋢➇⣏㮼㰉㝻旚㱣Ⱦ⋩ḴḼȿ奬↺䘬㈡ ⢵). Guo Hang [2012] 146 Hao. http://www. gov.cn/zwgk/2012-12/05/content_2283152. htm (accessed December 2013). UK DEFRA (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, United Kingdom). 2007. Air Quality and Climate Change: A UK Perspective. London: DEFRA. U N DP (United Nations Development Programme). 2010. UNDP China Human Development Report 2009/2010: China and a Sustainable Future: Towards a Low Carbon Economy & Society, http://hdr.undp.org/en /reports/nationalreports/asiathepacific/china /nhdr_China_2010_en.pdf.

van den Dobbelsteen, Andy, Siebe Broersma, and Michiel Fremouw. 2013. “Energy Potential Mapping and Heat Mapping: Prerequisite for Energy-Conscious Planning and Design.” In Sustainable Energy Landscapes: Designing, Planning and Development, Sven Stremke and Andy van den Dobbelsteen, eds. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. van den Dobbelsteen, Andy, and Sven Stremke, eds. 2012. Sustainable Energy Landscapes: Designing, Planning, and Development. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group. van den Dobbelsteen, Andy, Nico Tillie, Marc Joubert, Wim de Jager, and Duzan Doepel. 2012. “Towards CO2 Neutral City Planning— The Rotterdam Energy Approach and Planning (REAP)” in Cities and Climate Change, edited by Daniel Hoornweg, Mila Freire, Marcus Lee, Perinaz Bhada-Tata, and Belinda Yuen, 268–89. Washington, DC: World Bank. Wang Ke, Cui Xueqin, Fu Sha, and Zou Ji. 2012. “The Role of Cities in Meeting China’s Carbon Intensity Goal, Part 3: Methodologies and Analytic Tools for Low-Carbon City Planning,” World Resources Institute, February 9. http://www.wri.org/blog/role-cities-meetingchina%E2%80%99s-carbon-intensity-goal-1 (accessed December 2013 and June 2014). World Bank. 2012. Sustainable Urban Energy and Emissions Planning Guidebook: A Guide for Cities in East Asia and Pacific. Washington DC: World Bank. World Bank ESMAP (Energy Management Assistance Program). 2013. “Applying Abatement Cost Curve Methodology for Low-Carbon Strategy in Changning District, Shanghai.” Asia Sustainable and Alternative Energy Program report, ESMAP, World Bank, Beijing, China. World Bank-MEP (Ministry of Environmental Protection, PRC). 2012. “Integrated Air Pollution -Management in China: Developing Particulate Matter Control.” World Bank, Washington, DC. Zhou, Nan, Stephanie Ohshita, Lynn K. Price, and Nina Zheng. 2012. “A Low Carbon Development Guide for Local Government Actions in China.” Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory report LBNL-5576E, Berkeley, CA. Zhou, Nan, and Christopher J. Williams. 2013. “An International Review of Eco-City Theory, Indicators, and Case Studies.” Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory report LBNL-6513, Berkeley, CA.

547


ECO-AUDIT

Environmental Benefits Statement The World Bank is committed to preserving endangered forests and natural resources. The Office of the Publisher has chosen to print Urban China: Toward Efficient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Urbanization on recycled paper with 30 percent post-consumer waste, in accordance with the recommended standards for paper usage set by the Green Press Initiative, a nonprofit program supporting publishers in using fiber that is not sourced from endangered forests. For more information, visit www.greenpressinitiative.org.

Saved: • 53 trees • 23 million Btu of total energy • 4,515 lbs. of net greenhouse gases • 24,487 gal. of waste water • 1,639 lbs. of solid waste



Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.