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Despite smoggy reality at home, China wins praise in Paris for 'green projects'

While Beijingers choked and tried to find their way through the capital's smog, Chinese representatives were in Paris trying to promote the country's "green projects" at the global climate-change conference.

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Smog shrouded the Tiananmen Gate in Beijing even as China touted its "green progress". Photo: AP

While Beijingers choked and tried to find their way through the capital's smog, Chinese representatives were in Paris trying to promote the country's "green projects" at the global climate-change conference.

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As the climate summit inched towards its halfway point, producing a working text for ministers to decide on deeply contentious issues and reach a global deal to tackle climate change beyond 2020, Chinese negotiators and officials spent the first week trying to put a positive spin on China's "constructive" role - and were quite successful.

China's newfound position somewhere between the rich-poor divide has given it much more room for manoeuvring. With its offer to peak carbon emissions by 2030 and of US$3.1 billion to help vulnerable developing nations, the country seems to have gained a better position to ask for what its wants, while protecting its own Achilles' heel.

On Thursday, China joined other developing countries in mounting harsh criticism of industrialised nations trying to escape their funding obligations for poor countries.

Chinese officials, researchers and entrepreneurs were joined by some international organisations at the China Pavilion in cheerleading the country's green progress and ambitions.

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Even the French foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, praised China for having "so far played an extremely positive role".

But as negotiations enter the ministerial-level debates starting tomorrow, China is expected to be pushed on issues it feels not so comfortable with: the international scrutiny and review of its pledged domestic efforts to rein in carbon emissions.

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