China vows new-energy regulations to optimise industry, while still refuting ‘overcapacity’
- Beijing will help guide green sector that has come under increasing fire from the West, and the threshold for market entry will be raised with higher standards.
As China’s new-energy sector faces mounting trade barriers in the global market, officials in the country have pledged to optimise its massive capacity while continuing to refute the industrial-overcapacity concerns that have been voiced by Western politicians and Beijing itself.
“Whether from the perspective of a comparative advantage or global market demand, I don’t think there is an overcapacity problem that everyone is concerned about,” said Wang Shijiang, deputy director of the Electronic Information Department of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, during a press conference on Wednesday.
“In fact, China’s new-energy-manufacturing industry is basically dominated by private enterprises, and these firms will make decisions accordingly and quickly based on market development and changes,” Wang said.
Moving forward, Wang said, the government will offer guidance to the new-energy industry by amending regulations on product quality, technology and environmental protection, thus raising the threshold for market entry.