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szdaily -> Business/Markets -> 
Innovations help country achieve carbon neutrality
    2021-12-22  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

CHINA’S emission control efforts will test and develop a series of scientific conclusions, methods and technological innovations. Many Chinese researchers are now engaged in the carbon emission-related studies.

On Dec. 3, Lanzhou University, based in northwestern China’s Gansu Province, jointly established an institute with Shanghai-listed LONGi Green Energy Technology Co. to build a research and development platform of clean energy technology, equipment and material.

Gansu, with broad Gobi and desert areas, has abundant wind, light and heat resources which can be efficiently utilized to better serve the country’s carbon reduction goal.

Previously, the researchers from Lanzhou University have made creative research in thin-film solar cells, silicon solar cells, lithium-ion batteries, water supercapacitors and photocatalytic hydrogen production.

Both silicon and perovskite film material can be used in photovoltaic technology. The College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering under the university assembled efficient and stable perovskite cells.

China has pledged to have carbon dioxide emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060, making the world’s biggest cut in carbon emission intensity in the shortest time frame in history.

The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) released the China Sustainable Development Report 2020: Exploring Pathways towards Carbon Neutrality on Oct. 25, focusing on a comprehensive green and low-carbon transformation and carbon neutrality roadmap, with goals in phases declared for the country’s carbon neutrality commitment.

“As researchers, we are fully committed to giving new impetus to sustainability and carbon management,” said Zhao Lin, professor of Geocryology with the Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology in eastern China’s Jiangsu Province.

A research team led by Zhao recently discovered that under climate warming, the degradation of permafrost which reserves large amounts of organic carbon might increase greenhouse gas release over permafrost regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.

His team has made suggestions on restricting human activities in the above-mentioned regions to better protect the permafrost and its carbon sequestration capability.

In July 2021, the researchers with the Institute of Atmospheric Physics (IAP) of the CAS achieved the first global carbon flux data set and map from the country’s carbon dioxide monitoring satellite TanSat, indicating that China has the capacity of spatial quantitative monitoring of global carbon budget.

The TanSat was launched Dec. 22, 2016, making China the third country after Japan and the United States to monitor greenhouse gases with its own satellite.

The satellite’s mission is to achieve high-precision monitoring of the global atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and provide satellite data for scientific research.

It is very important to establish and improve a simulation and inversion system to transform the original satellite observation information into data available for scientists.

Over the years, the researchers from the IAP have developed a remote sensing inversion algorithm to accurately simulate the transmission process of solar radiation in the atmosphere, which greatly increased the accuracy of the global carbon dioxide distribution map generated from the satellite observation data. (Xinhua)

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