China aims to cut fossil energy use to below 20% by 2060

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Updated 24 October 2021
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China aims to cut fossil energy use to below 20% by 2060

BEIJING: China is targeting an ambitious clean energy goal of reducing fossil fuel use to under 20 percent by 2060, according to an official plan published by state media on Sunday.

The document follows a pledge by President Xi Jinping to wean the country off coal, with a target of peaking carbon emissions by 2030 and achieving carbon neutrality 30 years later.

But the country has been criticized for pushing ahead with opening dozens of new coal power plants.

Authorities have also been looking to ramp up production with coal prices surging and supplies running low in recent days, both factors behind power outages.

But on Sunday, China’s official Xinhua news agency laid out a host of targets in its path towards carbon neutrality.

Among them was the proportion of non-fossil fuel consumption reaching around 25 percent of total energy use by 2030 — when the nation targets peak emissions.

By then, carbon dioxide emissions per unit of gross domestic product would have dropped by more than 65 percent from 2005 levels, while the total installed capacity of wind and solar power is targeted to reach more than 1.2 billion kilowatts, Xinhua said.

The guidelines also reiterated an earlier aim for carbon emissions per unit of GDP to fall 18 percent in 2025, from 2020 standards.

China faces a struggle to wean itself off coal, which fuels nearly 60 percent of its energy-hungry economy.

Economic planners are nervous about slashing coal too quickly as it could cripple growth.

While China said in an earlier statement that President Xi intended to “strictly control” the growth of coal power plants, it also signaled a continued increase in the next few years, saying coal consumption would start to gradually reduce from 2026.


Saudi Absher platform delivers over $5.3bn in annual economic impact 

Updated 18 December 2025
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Saudi Absher platform delivers over $5.3bn in annual economic impact 

RIYADH: The Saudi government’s Absher digital services platform generates more than SR20 billion ($5.3 billion) in annual economic impact, highlighting the scale of savings created by the Kingdom’s transition from paper-based government procedures to digital services, according to the Ministry of Interior. 

Speaking to Al-Eqtisadiah, Bandar bin Mashari, assistant minister of interior for technology affairs, said the savings reflect broader efficiency gains from digitization. 

This comes as government services previously delivered through manual, paper-driven processes have moved onto a unified digital platform used by millions of citizens and residents. 

“Absher is one of the oldest platforms that has had a direct impact on strengthening the efficiency of spending and in opening new avenues for providing added value services,” said Mashari. 

He said the platform’s economic impact is closely linked to the government’s digital transformation agenda, which aims to reduce operational costs while improving service delivery across public agencies. 

The assistant minister further stated that the economic impact was at SR17 billion and grew to SR20 billion according to the ministry’s latest data. 

He added that Absher has completed a shift in its financial structure, transitioning from direct state capital funding to a sustainable financing model based on self-generated income. 

Mashari also said the Ministry of Interior is moving to expand its digital capabilities beyond service delivery, with a focus on security and financial protection. 

Authorities are working toward building a secure digital ecosystem designed to combat financial fraud and crime, he said, as digital transactions and online government services continue to expand. 

Absher is the flagship digital services platform of Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Interior and one of the Kingdom’s earliest large-scale e-government initiatives. 

Launched in 2010, the platform provides citizens, residents, visitors, and businesses with access to hundreds of government services through a unified digital portal and mobile application. 

Its services span civil affairs, passports, residency and visa services, as well as traffic and vehicle transactions, and business administration, significantly reducing the need for in-person government visits. 

Absher is widely used across the Kingdom, handling millions of electronic transactions each month and serving as a core pillar of Saudi Arabia’s broader digital transformation and Vision 2030 agenda.