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Low-carbon Lifestyle Finds Support at Two Sessions

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Wang Baojun, a deputy to the NPC from northeast China's Liaoning Province, brought a bill to the annual plenary session this year, calling for a low-carbon lifestyle among the entire society.

"Air conditioners are excessively relied on and throwaway chopsticks are used too widely," Wang counted on his fingers the high-carbon consumption behavior that his bill targets. "We must act swiftly and advocate a low-carbon lifestyle now."

In his bill, Wang proposes rules and regulations on low-carbon development, and publicity, education and training campaigns advocating low-carbon lifestyles.

To reduce the use of paper, political advisors are uniformly dispatched with laptops, a paperless way enabling them to submit their proposals to the CPPCC National Committee.

At the press center of the two sessions, journalists are advised to use the Internet to download information and arrange interviews as printed media manuals are no longer handed out.

Zhang Jing'an, director of the information department with the General Office of the CPPCC National Committee, said the move to end printed media manuals was to implement the low-carbon requirements.

Zhao Qizheng, spokesman of the 11th National Committee of the CPPCC, said during a press conference Tuesday that many of the 2,000-strong political advisors attending the session had submitted proposals related to low-carbon economy development.

"'Low-carbon' was already been a key term in the session last year and I believe it will become the most popular one this year," Zhao said.

Non-Communist parties like the Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang and China Zhi Gong Party proposed the establishment of a national scheme and market environment that encourages the development of low-carbon technologies.

China has heavily relied on coal to fuel its fast economic growth, but calls for a low-carbon economy have been rising.

In November last year, the government announced that by 2020, China's carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP will be reduced by 40 percent to 45 percent from the 2005 level, the share of non-fossil fuels in primary energy consumption will be raised to around 15 percent.

"'Low-carbon' is not a faraway concept," said Hong Tianhui, member of the CPPCC National Committee and vice-chairwoman of China's National Working Committee on Children and Women. "To live a low-carbon life, everyone must begin saving one single drop of water, one kwh of electricity and a piece of paper."

(Xinhua News Agency March 3, 2010)

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