This website uses cookies and other technologies to help us provide you with better content and customized services. If you want to continue to enjoy this website’s content, please agree to our use of cookies. For more information on cookies and their use, please see our latest Privacy Policy.

Accept

cwlogo

切換側邊選單 切換搜尋選單

RSPRC: Green Transition Should Be Integral to Taiwan's Stimulus Plan

RSPRC: Green Transition Should Be Integral to Taiwan's Stimulus Plan

Source:RSPRC

Taiwan's President, Tsai Ing-wen began her second term last month, after overseeing an effective COVID-19 response. Has she set out to achieve what she promised to do, and do Taiwanese agree with her energy transition policies? Also, what are local environmental groups and experts saying?

Views

300
Share

RSPRC: Green Transition Should Be Integral to Taiwan's Stimulus Plan

By Yi Ling Roy Ngerng (Assistant Researcher, RSPRC)
web only

Taiwan's President, Dr. Tsai Ing-wen began her second term last month, after overseeing an effective COVID-19 response. She took her second term in office on her highest approval rating ever – of 74.5%, in a survey conducted by the Taiwan Brain Trust. But has she set out to achieve what she promised to do, and do Taiwanese agree with her energy transition policies? Also, what are local environmental groups and experts saying?

Local Groups Are Asking the Government to Implement a Clearer Roadmap for Energy Transition and Carbon Reduction

A day before President Tsai's inauguration, Greenpeace Taiwan pointed out that under Taiwan's Renewable Energy Development Act that was "overhauled" last year, the Ministry of Economic Affairs announced draft regulations to require large electricity businesses (with "a contract capacity of more than 5,000 megawatts") to "use at least 10% of renewable power in five years". 

However, by April 1, the ministry has not yet provided any timeline for its implementation, Greenpeace Taiwan's campaign specialist Alynne Tsai said. Moreover, even if the 300 large electricity businesses in Taiwan abided by the requirements, it would still only result in a 1% growth of renewable power capacity by 2025.

A petition signed by more than 143 scientists from 82 academic and research centers released in April also pointed to the need for the government to address climate emergency. RSPRC's Lead Principal Investigator Prof. Chou Kuei-tien, who is among the signatories, also called out the "lackluster climate action response" and called on the government to implement a clear decarbonization roadmap. The scientists therefore called on the government to dedicate the same amount of resources to combat climate change as it has to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.

Stronger policy tools are therefore needed for Taiwan's energy transition. 

Green Transition Should Be Integral to Taiwan's Stimulus Plan

In RSPRC's survey, respondents rank accelerating energy transition and reducing carbon emissions as one of the top priorities the government should focus on, alongside fighting COVID-19. Taiwanese consider accelerating energy transition and carbon reduction to be one of the key long-term priorities for Taiwan, alongside managing the COVID-19 pandemic

These are strategies the more than 20 environmental groups in Taiwan are also calling on the government to implement. In a statement they released in April, they pointed out that Global Carbon Project’s  estimated decline of carbon emissions by 5% has exposed how the current global economic model is over-reliant on high-carbon growth.

In fact, a latest study published in the Nature Climate Change journal estimates that carbon emissions could decline by as much as 7% globally this year, as compared to 2019. As part of the stimulus provided by the government to businesses, the environmental groups are calling on the government to require these businesses to also fulfil green obligations, and that the fall in oil prices worldwide should be an opportunity not for the government to reduce fuel prices, but to use the cost savings to invest in a low-carbon transition.

RSPRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow Dr. Chao Chia-wei, who helped draft the statement, added that airlines and shipping companies applying for bailout from the government should also be required to abide by specific Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Targets, and that the new budget this year for Taiwan's forward-looking infrastructure development program should also be "designed as part of [a] green stimulus package".

Taiwanese Support More Green Obligations on Returning Taiwanese Businesses

But such green obligations should not only be required of local industries, but also for Taiwanese companies returning to invest in Taiwan due to the US-China trade war and COVID-19.

Just last month, the Ministry of Economic Affairs announced that 480 Taiwanese companies have pledged to invest more than NT$1 trillion in Taiwan, under government incentive programs which would allow them access to "lower interest rates, lengthened loan terms, relaxed labor restrictions, and easy access to land and utilities".

However, RSPRC's survey also found high support (82.1%) for these companies receiving government subsidies to oblige energy efficiency reviews – Dr. Chao pointed out that the government should require them to undergo energy assessments and to adhere to energy standards – a point he also made at RSPRC's report launch last year on Taiwan's long-term energy transition proposal.

Taiwan's Low Carbon Transition Pathway Should Include Carbon Tax

RSPRC's survey also supports the statement by the 20 Taiwan's environmental groups, that fuel prices should not be reduced. In fact, 56.7% of Taiwanese to RSPRC's survey said that they were willing for fuel prices to be increased upwards as a form of carbon tax, and 34.3% were even willing to accept increases of more than NT$3 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) from the current NT$2.6 kWh – if it could lead to lower carbon emissions.

The challenges of carbon pricing can also be tackled by channeling the revenue earned from carbon taxes to compensate and protect lower-income households – if done well and progressively. Dr. Chao also suggested implementing complementary measures such as subsidies for low-income households to purchase high efficiency appliances. The more than 20 environmental groups are also calling for the government to consider basic income as well as to protect the low-income as well – it is therefore a priority that the Minimum Wage Act announced more than a year ago which would peg wages to the cost of living should be urgently passed.

Tsai Should Make Use of the Window of Opportunity to Transform

It is thus exciting times for Taiwan to be in. While President Tsai has won a second term and garnered her highest approval rating ever, this should provide the impetus for her to pursue bolder energy transition and social transformation initiatives in order to bring Taiwan into the next era.

As Dr. Chao said, the bipartisan support for President Tsai's energy transition policy provides a "window of opportunity" with which she can push for bolder reforms toward a national-level strategy to combat climate change. To successfully do so would require transformations at all levels, including within society and governance. Moving on from the success of Taiwan's COVID-19 response, the next four years present much opportunity and potential for Taiwan to transform, if done well.


Risk Society and Policy Research Center at National Taiwan University (RSPRC, NTU) is one of Taiwan’s foremost centers conducting research on the risk and social impact of Climate Change, Energy Transition and Sustainability Transitions in Taiwan.

Views

300
Share

Keywords:

好友人數