Executive Summary
The low-carbon energy imperative
Among the issues domestic and international policymakers
must address in combating climate change is how
to deploy and diffuse current low-carbon technologies in
developing countries.
Developing countries, while bearing little responsibility
for historical releases of greenhouse gases (GHG), now
account for an increasingly large percentage of global
atmospheric emissions. Today, they make up around
50 percent of emissions (CAIT 2005) and by 2030 this
figure will rise to 65 percent (EIA 2009). Thus, without
widespread deployment of low-carbon technologies in
China, India, and beyond, global efforts to stabilize
emissions and prevent dangerous levels of warming will
be severely undermined.
Globally, while the pace of technology deployment has
dramatically accelerated over recent decades, technology
deployment within low- and middle-income countries
remains slow. Only 30 percent of developing countries
have reached the 25 percent penetration threshold and
only 9 percent have reached the 50 percent threshold for
technologies invented between 1975 and 2000 (Comin
& Hobijn 2004). Low-carbon technology deployment
generally aligns with this rule, with a few exceptions,
notably China.
China’s leadership and approaches
The speed and scale of technology deployment is highly
correlated with income level. Despite being a lower-middleincome
country, China has bucked this trend, boasting
technological achievements greater than those of many
high-income countries. In particular, China’s government
has poured money, R&D resources, and a combination
of incentives and regulatory levers, into developing and
deploying technologies in the cleaner energy (such as
supercritical/ultrasupercritical coal-fired power generation),
renewable energy, and energy efficiency sectors. It has also
invested in a range of partnership models with overseas
governments and companies, including joint ventures,
licensing agreements, and joint design. As a result, China
has transformed itself over the past two decades from a
low-carbon technology importer to a major manufacturer
of a number of low-carbon technologies.
Scaling Up Low-Carbon Technology Deployment: Lessons
from China examines how low-carbon technologies have
been introduced, adapted, deployed, and diffused in three
greenhouse gas-intensive sectors in China. By focusing on
key policy and program drivers, the report identifies the
building blocks for China’s successful low-carbon technology
deployment infrastructure. Its purpose is twofold: to
draw lessons of use in informing broader international
cooperation on technology transfer and deployment;
and to help governments and industries in middle- and
low-income countries to pursue an effective transition to a
low-carbon economy.
Focus technologies
This report focuses on three energy technologies:
- supercritical/ultrasupercritical (SC/USC) coal-fired
power generation technology;
- onshore wind energy technology; and
- blast furnace top gas recovery turbine (TRT)technology in the steel sector.
Why these particular technologies? First, all three
if widely deployed could make a significant dent in
emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas.
As the power and steel sectors are major global energy
consumers, efficiency improvement in these sectors entails
large carbon dioxide reduction. Wind, the fastest growing
renewable energy source, is the most likely renewable
technology to capture a big share of the global electricity
mix. Coal will likely remain a key global energy provider
for decades to come. Second, these three technologies
present diverse opportunities for future deployment both
in China and internationally. Such diversity enables the
lessons contained in this report to address issues across a
broad spectrum of low-carbon technology deployment—
thus maximizing its potential impact.
Key findings
China has accelerated its low-carbon technology
deployment in recent decades, making the transition
from technology importer to major manufacturer
of a number of low-carbon technologies. China
has made comprehensive efforts to put in place the
infrastructure to achieve accelerated deployment and
diffusion of the three technologies examined in this
report. This indicates its commitment to becoming
a global player in the low-carbon economy, securing
a domestic energy supply, and reducing carbon
dioxide emissions.
China’s experience highlights the important role of
effective domestic policy in stimulating low-carbon
technology. While the government took different
approaches for each of the three technologies
examined in this report, its building blocks for
technology deployment infrastructure include:
- Making a deliberate, holistic plan and long-term
commitment to the localization of a low-carbon
technology. This approach is taken in all three
cases.
- Establishing direct R&D funding programs to
support the launch and scale-up of low-carbon
technology innovation. This approach is especially
prominent in the case of SC/USC coal-fired power
generation technology.
- Improving businesses’ technological absorptive
capacity through directly funding their technology
learning. The success enjoyed by two leading
Chinese clean energy companies—Goldwind’s
surge in the global wind market and Shanxi Glower
Group’s dominance of the domestic TRT market—
are both indebted to this measure.
- Capitalizing on public-private and industryacademia
synergies to bring together multi-sector
expertise. The success of the localization of SC/
USC in particular is built on such multi-sector
synergies.
- Designing national-level and sector-wide laws, policies,
and regulations to scale-up commercialization
of low-carbon technology, create domestic markets,
and drive down the costs. The rapid development
of domestic wind energy greatly benefited from
such a legal and regulatory infrastructure.
- Relying on international cooperation to pursue
new-to-market technology and knowledge. TRT
technology’s transfer and deployment resulted from
China-Japan cooperation in the steel sector.
- China’s ambitious localization process for low-carbon
technology has raised concerns about intellectual
property rights (IPR) within some foreign governments
and among Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD) companies. The case
studies found the situation regarding technology
transfer to be more complex, including issues related
to ambiguous ownership and contractual arrangements
as well as IPR. While our case studies show that some
foreign firms have benefited significantly from China’s
low-carbon technology sector, both the SC/USC and
TRT case studies reveal that while the Chinese government
viewed these models as successful, international
companies involved were less convinced. Our survey
of multinationals involved in China’s low-carbon technology
sector also revealed that such firms typically do
not transfer all parts of a technology to China, holding
back some of their IPR. This approach addresses the
international companies’ concerns about IPR protection,
but compared to an atmosphere of higher trust is
suboptimal both for Chinese and overseas companies.
Conclusions and lessons learned
For Chinese policymakers:
- China’s comprehensive efforts to put in place the
infrastructure to achieve accelerated deployment
and diffusion of low-carbon technology has been
very successful in the three technologies examined
in this report. Within 20 years, China emerged
from a technology importer to a major manufacturer
of low-carbon technology. If the same level
of effort continues, China could soon be a player
at the forefront of low-carbon energy technology
innovation. However, underlying China’s success
are some concerns that need to be addressed.
- China’s preoccupation with localizing key energy
technologies may be viewed by foreign companies
and governments as going against standard international
business practices, such as relying on trade to
acquire technologies. The global wind industry, for
example, is a globally integrated industry. China’s
ambition to localize key wind energy technologies,
such as bearing and electric controls, leaves China
outside the global integration process—a process
that can be harnessed to reduce the cost of wind
technologies by increasing economies of scale,
fostering competition, and encouraging innovation
(Kirkegaard et al. 2009).
- In spite of the national government’s effective
technology deployment policy, China has not
yet addressed the pressing issue of deployment of
low-quality technologies. The low entry barrier for
domestic wind energy developers highlighted by
the wind case study, in particular, underscores the
importance of setting high technology standards at
the beginning of technology deployment.
- China’s business sector still has lessons to learn in
conducting international business negotiations.
On the one hand we see government-managed
processes in the coal and steel sectors that—while
effective—may have left some legacy of distrust;
on the other hand we see the hyper-competitiveness
of the wind industry with its minimal barriers
to entry. Nurturing a more sophisticated domestic
business sector through market means is a key task
for Chinese policymakers seeking to minimize costs
and barriers and maximize trust and cooperation so
as to scale-up low-carbon energy industries.
For U.S. policymakers:
- China’s ambition is to emerge as a global science
and technology power and Beijing is keenly aware
that the next phase of the science and technology
revolution will likely center on low-carbon technology.
While the term “indigenous innovation” has
been interpreted in international policy circles as
encompassing a very narrow group of government
procurement policies, in fact, the policies are much
more ambitious and involve the kinds of long-term
support for RD&D that are detailed in these three
case studies.
- There are major business opportunities for U.S.
companies in China’s low-carbon technology deployment
efforts. The success of Japanese and German
companies in the wind and power sectors indicates
that through joint venture, licensing, or joint
design, foreign technology providers can benefit
from China’s financial resources, manufacturing
capacity, and enormous market. While China’s
ambitious localization process for low-carbon
technology has raised concerns about intellectual
property rights in some foreign governments and
among OECD companies, major multinationals
surveyed as part of the study did not view IPR as
a major issue. In the three case studies, the issue
was somewhat more ambiguous. There did not
appear to be any outright IPR violation, but instead
different perceptions of ownership and contracts
have colored some of the arrangements.
- China’s experience highlights the importance of
effective domestic policy and long-term government
commitment. Without clear and lasting signals
from the government and a central role for
government-funded R&D, the market will not
automatically embrace low-carbon technology.
For technology providers:
China’s preference for domestically manufactured
technologies can present a competitive risk for foreign
companies seeking a foothold in China. However, in
practice, depending on the technology investors’ own
conditions and needs, foreign technology providers can
make a profit through various approaches, including:
- Joint venture: Benefits include easy access to the
Chinese market and freedom for foreign companies
to use their own business model to sell products.
One disadvantage is the possibility of leaking intellectual
property rights to local partners. Because
of this drawback, many joint-venture companies
in China act as manufacturers or post-sale maintenance
facilities instead of technology developers.
- Licensing: Its benefit is guaranteed patent fees
and royalties free of concerns about the technology
users’ business model. The disadvantage is that
China’s exports might swamp the marketplace and
the patent owners receive only a small portion of
the profit, usually from 3–6 percent of profits.
- Joint design: If technology providers lack manufacturing
capacity and financial resources, joint
design offers good access to China’s financial
capital and enormous market. The drawback is
that in most cases all patent rights are lost to the
Chinese partner companies.
- Wholly foreign-owned investment: Benefits
include freedom for foreign investors to use their
own business models and easy access to China’s
large skilled and relatively inexpensive labor force.
For China this is a mechanism for training up a
workforce in new technologies and related services.
The disadvantage for the foreign company is that
the Chinese government and scholars do not view
wholly foreign-owned investment as a technology
transfer mechanism. Therefore the foreign investors
are less likely to receive administrative or financial
support from the Chinese government.
For other countries who are adapting technology:
Other countries might lack the tremendous scale
of resources for domestic investment in R&D that
China can bring to bear, but China’s experience
demonstrates some clear successes from which other
countries can benefit. These include: the active role
of the government in pursuing bilateral engagement
internationally (in the case of steel); the importance
of providing clear and lasting policy signals for clean
energy markets (in the case of wind); and the central
role that government-funded R&D can play (as
illustrated by the localization of all three technologies).