

As the United States hurtles away
from climate commitments under Donald Trump, China is presenting a starkly
different vision of the global green transition under Xi Jinping.
China has put forth a strategy that
blends domestic decarbonisation with calls for multilateral cooperation and
support for developing countries.
Trump’s recent move to weaken
Washington’s climate commitments has revived a familiar trans-Pacific divide.
While the US appears to be
retreating from international climate leadership, Beijing is reaffirming its
intention to press ahead with cleaner energy, emissions control, and global
climate governance.
In a report to the 20th National
Congress of the Chinese Communist Party, Xi pledged tighter control over both
the volume and intensity of energy use, especially fossil fuels, alongside a
gradual shift toward managing carbon emissions on the same dual basis.
The commitment signals China’s
determination to move beyond growth-at-all-costs toward what Beijing frames as high-quality
development.
Xi outlined a broad transformation
of the economy, promising to accelerate clean, low-carbon, and high-efficiency
energy use across industry, construction, and transport.
While acknowledging China’s
continued reliance on coal, he stressed that it would be burned in cleaner and
more efficient ways, even as authorities expand exploration of oil and natural
gas and seek to unlock untapped reserves to guarantee energy security during
the transition.
Hydropower development, Xi said,
would be carefully balanced with ecological protection, while nuclear energy
would be advanced in an active, safe and orderly manner.
At the same time, China plans to
boost the carbon-sink capacity of ecosystems through reforestation and
conservation, a strategy aimed at offsetting emissions while restoring degraded
landscapes.
Beyond domestic policy, Xi has
consistently framed climate change as a shared global challenge that demands
cooperation rather than confrontation.
During a joint national science and
technology forum, he urged countries to foster “an open, fair, equitable and
non-discriminatory environment” for scientific progress, arguing that
collaboration is essential to addressing climate change, food security, and
energy security so that innovation delivers broader benefits to humanity.
At a national eco-civilisation
conference in 2023, Xi called for comprehensive planning that links industrial
restructuring, pollution control, environmental protection, and climate
response.
He also highlighted the need to
strengthen China’s capacity to adapt to climate impacts, while pushing for
self-reliance in green and low-carbon technologies.
Climate response and new-pollutant
treatment, he said, should become core areas of national research, with
breakthroughs pursued in key technologies.
His message has extended to global
biodiversity and multilateralism. At a 2022 conference linked to the UN
biodiversity framework, Xi urged nations to translate ambition into action,
support developing countries, and coordinate responses to climate change,
biodiversity loss, and other planetary threats.
He stressed the importance of a fair
international order underpinned by international law and “true multilateralism”
language that positions China as a defender of collective action at a time when
Washington is pulling back.
That contrast has sharpened
following Trump’s latest climate reversal, which critics say undermines years
of global momentum toward emissions reduction.
During his first term in office,
Trump withdrew the US from the Paris Agreement and rolled back environmental
regulations, arguing they constrained American industry, a stance he is now
reviving.
Xi, by comparison, has repeatedly
linked climate action with development, especially for poorer nations.
He has said that building a just
world of shared prosperity requires helping developing countries adopt
sustainable production and lifestyles, strengthen environmental protection, and
achieve harmony between humanity and nature.
China, he added, stands ready to
deepen international cooperation in green infrastructure, renewable energy,
green mining, and low-carbon transport, pledging support to developing nations
“to the best of its ability.”
For Africa, Asia, and Latin America
— regions already bearing the brunt of extreme weather — the divergence between
Beijing and Washington matters.
While the US reconsiders its
commitments, China is positioning itself as a partner in climate adaptation and
green growth, even as it grapples with its own massive emissions footprint.
The result is a widening
philosophical gap: Trump’s America prioritises short-term economic interests
and energy nationalism, while Xi’s China is advancing a state-led green
transition tied to global engagement.
Whether Beijing can fully deliver on
its climate promises remains an open question. But as the US steps back, China
is clearly stepping forward and eager to shape the next phase of the world’s
climate response.

















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