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China, U.S. to Continue to Work for Environment Protection
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Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji and U.S.
Vice-President Al Gore reaffirmed in Washington DC on April
9, 1999 that China and the United States will continue to
work together for the protection of the global environment.
Zhu and Gore made the reaffirmation at the
second session of the China-U.S. Forum on Environment and
Development.
"Environment and development
are major issues of general interest of the international
community today and how to protect the ecological
environment on which mankind depends for subsistence and
development, while developing the economy, has become a
pressing and arduous task facing the people across the
world," Zhu said when speaking at the meeting.
He said China and the United States held the
first session of the forum in Beijing in 1997. Over the past
two years, he said, the two countries have conducted
extensive exchanges and cooperation in various fields
covered in the forum and made positive progress in this
regard.
Zhu said that at this session the two
countries will review the progress made during the last two
years, share experience and look into the future. "This
will be of great significance to increase mutual beneficial
cooperation between our two sides to meet the challenges of
the new century," he added.
Zhu said
China will use more clean energy so as to protect the
environment better. To do that, he said, the government need
to restructure the economy and to use more natural gas and
other clean energy and oil.
Since the 1980s,
China and the United States have indeed conducted very
productive cooperation in environment protection, especially
in 1997, when Chinese President Jiang Zemin visited the
United States and the two countries signed the initiative on
environment and development.
During U.S.
President Bill Clinton's visit to China last year, China and
the United States signed a letter of intent for the urban
air quality monitoring between the two sides, thus further
deepening the bilateral cooperation.
Gore, who
co-sponsored the first session of the forum with then
Chinese Premier Li Peng when he visited China in March 1997,
said today that the United States and China have a very
strong interest in working together to find ways to solve
the environment problem, which also allow the two countries
to continue the economic progress.
"We
have gathered some of the best minds from both of our
countries, and we have asked them to work together to find
new ways to achieve our common goals," he said.
Gore said that the United States and China are
a world apart, and so much of "our work together
must," therefore, inevitably be done long-distance.
"That should make us appreciate all the more the
opportunity for today's face-to-face meetings, an uncommon
opportunity, which we should seize, to move forward toward a
cleaner, brighter and better future for both of our
peoples," he said.
At the first session
of the forum, China and the United States agreed to
strengthen their cooperation in energy and environment
through an initiative to accelerate clean energy projects
and the appropriate transfer of related technologies.
Besides, China's State Planning Commission and
the U.S. Energy Department signed the China-U.S. initiative
on energy and environment cooperation to promote effective
cooperation in these fields, including the use of clean
energy.
Zhu arrived in the United States
Tuesday for an eight-day official visit to the country, the
first by a Chinese premier in 15 years.
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